Svg Motors on 2040-cars
Dayton, Ohio, United States
Dayton SVG Motors - Setting the Standard for How You Shop for and Own Your Used Vehicle
Welcome to the Dayton branch of the SVG Motors family. At our Shoup Mill Road location, our customers can find all of the topnotch, high-quality, pre-owned vehicles they're looking for, including many options from several popular brand names, such as Chevrolet, Chrysler, Dodge, and Ford.
At Dayton SVG Motors, we're proud to be the home for quality used vehicles for the greater Vandalia and Englewood, OH area, and we're proud to be a part of the larger, overall SVG Motors group of dealerships, and everything they stand for in our neck of the world.
SVG Motors Group Locations Throughout Ohio
Thanks to our company's high standards of customer service, and our SVG Motors group goal of meeting our customers' wide variety of car-shopping needs, we're able to provide our customers throughout Fairborn, Huber Heights, and beyond, with all of sales, financing, and services they need to make their entire car-buying and ownership experience easy and efficient. We go above and beyond to provide our customers with exceptional value for their vehicle purchase, offering what we like to call our Superior Value Guarantee.
Looking for a new vehicle, but not interested in one of our Dayton SVG Motors used models? Check out some of our other customer-orientated locations, and see all that SVG Motors can do for you:
SVG Chrysler Dodge Jeep Ram Eaton, your local home South Barron Street, for all of the brand-new, powerful, well-built, and reliable models from our favorite carmakers
SVG Chevy Buick GMC Urbana OH, brand-new vehicles from legendary American companies with a decades-long history of well-earned reputations for quality, with a convenient location on Scioto Street
SVG Chevrolet Greenville, whether you're looking for a brand-new Chevy truck, SUV, sedan, or coupe, you can find them all at this East Russ Road location
No matter what your needs, and regardless of your budget and personality style, SVG Motors has a vehicle that will work for you. Don't compromise when it comes to shopping for and buying the vehicle you want. Stop by Dayton SVG Motors, and get the used vehicle you crave, or visit any of our other locations, and let our professional staff help you find the ideal new model for you.
Contact Us:
Address: 400 Shoup Mill Rd, Dayton, OH 45415
Phone: 833-203-5654
Email: lynn@svgmotors.com
Website: https://www.svgmotors.com/
Chevrolet Equinox for Sale
Svg chevrolet greenville(US $28,180.00)
Svg chevrolet buick gmc urbana(US $28,475.00)
Clean title!(US $13,571.00)
2012 chevrolet equinox ltz(US $2,900.00)
2014 chevrolet equinox ls(US $8,100.00)
2014 chevrolet equinox(US $8,300.00)
Auto Services in Ohio
World Import Automotive Inc ★★★★★
Westerville Auto Group ★★★★★
W & W Auto Tech ★★★★★
Vendetta Towing Inc. ★★★★★
Van`s Tire ★★★★★
Tri County Tire Inc ★★★★★
Auto blog
Mark Reuss: GM can't afford product 'misses,' has 'thought about' CT6 V-Series
Thu, Apr 9 2015Mark Reuss is a busy man. He oversees General Motors' global product portfolio, an all-encompassing task for a company that sold more than 9.9 million cars and trucks last year. When GM launches a well-received product, like the road-going rocket ship that is the Chevrolet Corvette Z06 – he gets credit. When the company stumbles with the slow-selling Chevy Malibu or grapples with fallout from the decade-old Saturn Ion and its flawed ignition switch, he gets blamed. GM owners, the press and sometimes the federal government, demand answers. Bob Lutz famously held the job before Reuss. So did Mary Barra, who's now GM's chief executive. There's a New GM, but the lineage is connected to a long history. When he's not thinking product, Reuss, an executive vice president, also runs the purchasing and supply chain for the company, which is still one of the largest industrial empires in the world. We caught up with Reuss on the floor of the New York Auto Show, where GM had just rolled out two crucial new products: the 2016 Cadillac CT6 and the 2016 Chevrolet Malibu. Speaking with a small group of reporters, Reuss delved into a variety of subjects, including the new Malibu, Cadillac's future (he thinks the ATS-V is going to "flame the M3 and M4"), and other topics. On fixing the Malibu: "We can't miss. We can't have those kinds of misses [like the previous generation] on our cars and crossovers and trucks. We can't do that. If we do that, we give a reason for someone to go buy something else. It's that simple. "On a car like the Malibu we have a chance to really fix all of that, which we have, and then lead. Then you've got a real opportunity there. So that's what we've really been focused on here – to fix those things." He later added: "We need that car here to transform Chevrolet desperately because it's the heart of the market. And when you think of Chevrolet, people will come back and think about what we did with the [new] Malibu and the Cruze... It's hugely important to us." On Cadillac: "If we go out and try and out-German the Germans, it's probably not going to work. We've got an opportunity here generationally where there's a lot of people younger than me that have parents that drove BMWs and Mercedes, and I think there's an opportunity there for those people to drive something different than what their parents did, and I think that's always been an opportunity in the auto industry if you look at the history of it.
First 2015 Chevy Corvette Z06 engine blows up at just 891 miles
Thu, Jan 1 2015You've waited and watched and waited some more for the arrival of your 650-horsepower, $78,000 Chevrolet Corvette Z06. Finally, that joyous day arrives and you eagerly, but gingerly, begin to break-in the 6.2-liter supercharged V8 monster under your hood. Then 900-odd miles after delivery, your excitement grinds, quite literally, to a halt. That's what the owner of one 2015 Z06 claimed happened to him when a simple break-in drive resulted in a lunched engine. The owner, known as Lawdogg149 on Corvette Forum, says he was out breaking-in his car ahead of a January track event when it happened. "While making a pull from 35 miles per hour, I accelerated and shifted short of redline, and boom - the car began knocking. I pulled over and popped the hood. I could hear a loud knock coming from the No. 6 cylinder area along with a serious, grinding, metal-on-metal sound coming from the supercharger area," Lawdogg wrote. A subsequent trip to the dealer confirmed his concerns, with the service facility telling Lawdogg that the No. 6 valvetrain had failed. The dealer couldn't research the issue further, though, as General Motors requested the engine be returned for a more thorough evaluation. The good news for the Z06's unlucky owner, at least, is that GM will be covering the engine replacement under warranty, an expense that Corvette Forum estimates is a nearly $24,000 procedure. At this point, the two leading theories behind the engine's detonation involve a manufacturing defect – which could be why GM is so keen to tear the blown powerplant down – or a mistake on the part of Lawdogg. As Motor Authority points out, such an error could be something as simple as the Z06's owner accidentally shifting to first rather than third during his 35-mph pull. If, however, there's a deeper manufacturing problem with the Z06's engine, this might not be the only case we end up hearing about.
800k car names trademarked globally, suddenly alphanumerics seem reasonable
Tue, 01 Oct 2013What's in a name? This cliched phrase probably gets tossed out at every marketing meeting that happens when a new car gets its nomenclature. We know the answer, though: everything. The name of a car has all the potential to make or break it with fickle customers that are more conscious than ever about what their purchases say about them.
That's giving headaches to marketing folks across the automotive industry. "It's tough. In 1985 there were about 75,000 names trademarked in the automotive space. Today there are 800,000," Chevrolet's head of marketing, Russ Clark, told Automotive News. Infiniti's president, Johan de Nysschen, echoed Clark's sentiment, saying, "The truth of the matter is, across the world, there is hardly a name or a letter that hasn't already been claimed by one car manufacturer or another. You can go through the alphabet - A, B, C and so forth - and you will quickly see that almost all available letters are taken."
What has that left automakers to do? Get creative. In the case of Infiniti, it made the controversial move to bring all of its cars' names into a new scheme, classifying them as Q#0 for cars and QX#0 for SUVs and crossovers. So the Infiniti G, which was available as the G25 and G37, is now the Q50. The FX37 and FX50 are now the QX70.