Find or Sell Used Cars, Trucks, and SUVs in USA

Beautiful Truck: Rumblebee Clone on 2040-cars

US $8,755.00
Year:2004 Mileage:100500
Location:

Kansas City, Missouri, United States

Kansas City, Missouri, United States

I have a beautiful Rumblebee Clone truck for sale. It will turn heads! I love this vehicle and it has been my daily driver. The only reason I'm selling it is because I rarely haul anything now. It has been lowered the right way with new shocks and struts, tinted windows, new taillights, custom exhaust - great rumbling action, rumblebee style hood scoop, bed topper and spoiler, new fan on engine, no leaks, regular maintenance, clean, non smoker vehicle, slight tears in rumblebee style seats, chrome accents throughout. Nearly new all weather tires great for winter. After market cd player and subwoofer / 800 watt amplifier. Great running and looking vehicle. Single cab, Dodge SLT, two wheel drive. 100k miles. Might consider partial trade as well.
Accident Free and Clear title: VIN 1D7HA16n64J295443
  
  Rick
913-999-4071

Auto Services in Missouri

Wrightway Garage ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service
Address: 8813 Veterans Memorial Pkwy, Old-Monroe
Phone: (636) 240-9650

Southwest Auto Parts ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Automobile Parts & Supplies, Automobile Body Shop Equipment & Supplies
Address: 5345 Southwest Ave, Maplewood
Phone: (314) 776-3355

Smart Buy Tire ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Auto Oil & Lube, Tire Dealers
Address: 1045 S Campbell Ave, Springfield
Phone: (417) 889-2886

Sedalia Power Sports ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Engine Rebuilding & Exchange, All-Terrain Vehicles
Address: 5004 S Limit Ave, Sedalia
Phone: (660) 829-1829

Raymond Smith Body Shop ★★★★★

Automobile Body Repairing & Painting, Glass-Wholesale & Manufacturers, Glass-Auto, Plate, Window, Etc
Address: 505 E US Highway 136, Albany
Phone: (660) 726-3223

Payless Car Care Center ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Automobile Parts & Supplies, Automobile Accessories
Address: 605 SW State Route 7, Greenwood
Phone: (816) 229-1997

Auto blog

Watch a Dodge Viper driver show off his V10 all the way into a wall

Mon, Apr 11 2016

Has there ever been a show-off video that doesn't end terribly? This video clip captured with a cellphone shows the driver of a neon green Viper GTS giving a fellow motorist a couple throttle blips to signify his intent – which seems to be to crash the Viper into a concrete wall as quickly as possible. It's not pretty. The mean machine seems to be a second-generation Viper GTS in Stryker Green. To our knowledge, no photos have surfaced of the aftermath, so we wish both the driver and their most-likely bruised ego a speedy recovery. Who knows, maybe the Viper is also salvageable.

2013 Dodge Dart GT

Mon, 16 Dec 2013

My younger brother bought a Dodge Dart earlier this summer. It's a basic SXT, in Maximum Steel Metallic, with the 2.0-liter engine, a six-speed automatic transmission and not a whole lot else. Unfortunately, at the time, the Dart was one of the few cars in the compact class I'd never driven. I didn't know a lot about it, and therefore, didn't have a lot to say when he bought it. I think the words "based on an Alfa," popped out when I first saw it.
As it turns out, he's grown quite fond of the dark gray sedan, so it was with some degree of enthusiasm that I paid him a visit in this bright-orange Dart GT. I was excited to see what it was about the Dart that he enjoyed so much, despite my tester featuring a different engine, transmission and a lot more tech. After a week with the car, though, I must say: I don't quite see what all the fuss is about.
Driving Notes

Legacy Classic Power Wagon First Drive

Wed, Oct 7 2015

Shortly before the US entered World War II, Dodge supplied the military with a line of pickups internally codenamed WC, those letters designating the year 1941 and the half-ton payload rating. From 1941 to 1945 Dodge built more than a quarter million of them, and even though "WC" came to refer to the Weapons Carrier body style, the WC range served in 38 different configurations from pickup trucks to ambulances to six-wheeled personnel and weapons haulers. The story is that soldiers returning from active duty badgered Dodge for a civilian version of that indefatigable warhorse, so Dodge responded with the Power Wagon in 1946. Even for those no-nonsense times the truck was so austere that the first three names Dodge gave it were "Farm Utility Truck," "WDX General Purpose Truck," and "General Purpose, One Ton Truck." "Power Wagon" was the fourth choice, not finalized until just before it went on sale. Nothing like today's Power Wagon, the original could be seen as either a glorified tractor or a slightly less uncouth military vehicle – hell-for-leather meant going 50 miles per hour. But it would go nearly anywhere. The civilian version was still built like it had to survive, well, a world war; power take-offs (PTOs) ran all manner of ancillaries; multiplicative gear ratios helped it produce enough torque to make an earthquake envious. Said to be the first civilian 4x4 truck made in America, any organization that needed a simple, sturdy mechanized draught animal knew it needed a Power Wagon. If history, the aura of war, and ruthless functionality attract you but mean comforts and 70-year-old manners don't, then you need to get in touch with Legacy Classic Trucks. If that history, the aura of war, and the ruthless functionality attract you but the mean comforts and 70-year-old manners don't, then you need to get in touch with Legacy Classic Trucks. The Jackson Hole, WY, restorer retains every ounce of the Power Wagon's orchard-work aptitude, decorated with present-day amenities and the best components. Each job starts with having to find a usable donor. The city of Breckenridge, CO, bought the red truck in our gallery in 1947 and used it as a snowplow for the next 30 years. In 1977 a log-home builder bought it from the city and used it for another decade as a company hauler. That's the kind of grueling longevity that lets Ram put a five-figure premium on the 2500 Power Wagon pickup it sells today. Legacy Classics founder Winslow S.