1994 Lamborghini Diablo on 2040-cars
Burnham, Pennsylvania, United States
If you have more questions or want more details please email : blondelldoucett@juno.com .
Lamborghini Diablo. It's a 1995 finished in black metallic,
with a black leather interior with red piping. Pictures just don't do this car justice. In the sunshine, it looks
totally amazing. This car turns heads in a big way, so if you don't like attention, this is not your car. The
looks and the sounds of this car are like no other. Equipped with a free flowing performance exhaust the gives it
the perfect Lamborghini sound.
This Diablo just had an engine out service, with a new carbon kevlar clutch assembly. The clutch was the only weak
link in the Diablo, and this one no longer has that problem. I've been in this car myself, and it runs and drives
perfectly. These cars are not like Ferrari's that fall apart just sitting in your garage, and cost like $2 per
mile to drive just in maintenance and repair costs - Lamborghini's are rock solid drivers, contrary to what most
people think. Just check out Jay Leno's video on YouTube where he shows his hard driven Countach with over 70k
miles, and his mechanic friend Franco's 1991 Diablo. They are rock solid cars, and part of the reason why these
cars are becoming so dear. All fluids changed, all it needs is a new caring owner.
Email me for questions, and I'll get them answered right away.
Thanks for looking!
Lamborghini Diablo for Sale
- 1998 lamborghini diablo diablo sv(US $97,300.00)
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- 1980 replicakit makes diablo(US $24,200.00)
Auto Services in Pennsylvania
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Valley Seat Cover Center ★★★★★
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Lamborghini officially reveals new Veneno Roadster
Sun, 20 Oct 2013Sexy or vulgar - whatever you thought of the Veneno which Lamborghini unveiled at the Geneva Motor Show this past March, it didn't much matter. Because by the time we saw it, all three examples were already bought and paid for... at the equivalent of $3.9 million each. But if you had that much cash burning a hole in your pocket and lamented missing out on the opportunity to put one in your driveway, we've got good news, because Lamborghini has just confirmed another nine examples to be built. Only this time, it's got no roof.
Now officially confirmed after leaking out the other day, the Lamborghini Veneno Roadster features the same radical styling, extreme competition-derived aerodynamics, carbon-intensive construction and twelve-cylinder powertrain as the coupe that proceeded it and which we enjoyed photographing for your viewing pleasure just last month. The principal difference, of course, is the open-air cockpit, which offers no protection from the elements whatsoever: no fabric umbrella contraption, no removable glass or metal panel, nothing to get between your dome and the air rushing by at 220 miles per hour. That's the same top speed as the coupe, while the 0-62 run takes just a fraction of a second longer at 2.9 seconds. But we doubt you'd notice the difference with that 6.5-liter V12 revving just behind your ears.
It's the same engine and seven-speed ISR gearbox that powers the Aventador, only tuned up to 750 horsepower for the Veneno. And it should have more power, because at 3.3 million euros (about $4.5 million, give or take a Gallardo), the Veneno Roadster isn't just $600,000 more expensive than the Veneno coupe, it's also more than ten times the price of an Aventador. Still with us? You can scope out all the details in the press release below and browse through the photos in the gallery above for a closer look.
Watch the Lamborghini Egoista fire up on stage
Mon, 13 May 2013Seeing the wild Lamborghini Egoista is one thing, but hearing the single-seat concept car fire to life in all its glory is something entirely different. Visitors at the Lamborghini 50th anniversary celebration in Sant' Agata got that rare opportunity when the Egoista made its presence felt. Nothing says, "I have arrived" quite like a 5.2-liter V10 barking at the crowd. It may not be the prettiest belle at the ball, but it has the pipes to make even the most jaded among us weak in the knees.
You can catch the clip of the machine firing up in the brief (and sadly shaky) video below. We've also included a more polished video recap from the anniversary celebration. Something tells us you don't need a reason to spend a few minutes watching classic Lamborghini models prancing through Italy. You're welcome.
Lamborghini's Huracan quicker than its costlier Aventador?
Mon, 25 Aug 2014Car and Driver threw a leg over the Lamborghini Huracán and rode it hard all around the 16-turn Circuito Internationale Nardò, next to the banked oval that's brought us many a top-speed video. On the way to discovering the bull calf sweetly eclipses the Gallardo it replaces, CD also discovered that - comparing their own tests - it is faster from zero to 60 miles per hour than its paterfamilias, the Aventador.
Now, we should all know that 0-60 tests are an imprecise discipline, but CD's Eric Tingwall torched the sprint in the Huracán in 2.5 seconds - yes, faster than a whole lot of other very expensive super-coupes. In the magazine's last instrumented test of the Aventador Aaron Robinson ran 3.0 seconds, and for more Aventador perspective we can compare Motor Trend's 2.8 seconds, also scored at Nardo, Road & Track at 2.7 seconds and Lamborghini's estimated 0-62 mph time of 2.9 seconds. Any way you chop that up, 2.5 seconds beats it. A bit of a shock, then: Lamborghini lists the Huracán's 0-62 mph time as 3.2 seconds.
We'll get a more precise idea of the discrepancy when more tests come online, but for the moment - and in this one respect - we've got the $241,945, 602-horsepower Huracán showing its angry backside to the $397,500, 691-hp Aventador. Even if it remains true, though, we're not sure it matters; in a figurative case of Predator versus Alien, it's arguable that the only way to be wrong is not to own one.