1987 Saab 900 Spg Hatchback 2-door 2.0l on 2040-cars
Loganville, Georgia, United States
Body Type:Hatchback
Engine:2.0L 1985CC l4 GAS DOHC Turbocharged
Vehicle Title:Clear
Fuel Type:GAS
For Sale By:Private Seller
Interior Color: Buffalo Gray
Make: Saab
Number of Cylinders: 4
Model: 900
Trim: SPG Hatchback 2-Door
Warranty: Vehicle does NOT have an existing warranty
Drive Type: FWD
Mileage: 165,102
Options: Sunroof, Cassette Player, Leather Seats
Sub Model: SPG
Exterior Color: Edwardian Gray
This is a real 1987 Saab 900 SPG.Consider it a parts car that runs and drives well. The odometer shows 165K but consider it true miles unknown as a "buyer" advised it was incorrect.I drove it twenty five miles today and it purred along at 75MPH. Boost goes into the mid yellow zone of the guage.Goes and stops straight.Lights and signals work.The body is straight and rust free,a southern car. It will idle forever, runs cool. The five speed transmission shifts perfectly. Tires are good.You MAY be able to drive it home to wherever but remember that it is 26 years old.It is complete minus the headliner. I was told that the front bumper extensions are incorrect.All other SPG bits are there. Likely needs a turbo as it does smoke lightly. A little hard to start. The interior is rough and needs ALL the things that C900s usually need including a drivers side window motor. Paint is flat but I have included a pic of the car in the rain for those that dream like me. I do have the Tennessee title but the buyers line was scratched out by the previous owner. Will provide that and a bill of sale which is all that is required here in Georgia.With four C900s I have enough projects. This is a realistic description of a very cool old car.
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NEVS' reorganization plan approved after all?
Fri, 29 Aug 2014What a difference a day makes. Thursday, we reported that current Saab parent National Electric Vehicle Sweden had its application for creditor protection denied by the Swedish court for being "vague and completely undocumented." But NEVS was back in court on Friday, and this time the application was granted. However, the story continued to get weirder as defense contractor Saab AB allegedly revoked NEVS' rights to use the Saab name.
NEVS did put out a brief press release confirming the court decision saying: "The District court of Vänersborg, Sweden, today August 29 approved the application for reorganization from National Electric Vehicle Sweden AB." The company allegedly has over 90 creditors, and according to Reuters, it owes them roughly 400 million Swedish krona ($57.56 million). The business says that it is in negotiations with two, unnamed companies to get additional funding.
Also, according to Reuters, Saab AB, best known for making fighter planes, has revoked NEVS' rights to the Saab brand name because the company's application for creditor protection gave the defense contractor that right. When NEVS bought Saab, it only acquired the automaker's physical assets, and had to negotiate for the rights to use the name.
Junkyard Gem: 1971 Saab 96
Sat, Jan 9 2021Americans could buy the very first mass-produced Saab car, the 92, all the way back in 1950. Few did, because a tiny and odd-looking Swedish car with a smoky two-stroke engine buzzing out 25 horsepower didn't seem suitable for highway use, especially when a new Plymouth business coupe sold for $1,371 (about $15,180 today). Then came the 93, notable to Americans mostly for being sold by novelist Kurt Vonnegut's Saab dealership in Massachusetts. The first Saab to win over respectable numbers of American car shoppers was the 96, introduced here for the 1961 model year. North American 96 sales continued through 1973, and I've managed to find one of the later 96s in a junkyard located near Pikes Peak in Colorado. North American sales of the much less oddball 99 began in the 1969 model year, and that car evolved directly into the original 900 that sold very well through the early 1990s. Still, some Americans living in icy regions stayed loyal to the 96, so Saab kept selling 96s here until federal emissions and safety regulations made such sales unprofitable. Meanwhile, Scandinavians could buy new 96s all the way through 1980. My grandfather, a self-taught engineer who set foot outside the city limits of St. Paul, Minn., only to race Corvettes at Elkhart Lake (in summer) and all manner of rust-prone imports on frozen lakes (in winter), had this Saab 96 when I was a kid. The somewhat uneven bodywork near street level is the result of house-paint-over-Bondo corrosion repairs, and I recall going on some terrifying high-speed rides around town with Grandpa, circa 1975, watching the pavement flash by through the holes in the floor as we headed to the VFW for the meat raffle. Hey, the St. Paul VFW had Grain Belt on tap for cheap, a consolation for those who failed to win any meat. After that, a man could take his Saab to an establishment selling authentic St. Paul booya. As I recall, this Saab finally broke in half at an ice race in the late 1970s and got replaced by a slightly less rusty Rabbit. The serious Saab 96 nuts— including my grandfather— preferred the two-stroke three-cylinder engine, due to its chainsaw racket and allegedly superior performance on ice. By 1969, however, a Ford-produced V4 became the only powerplant available in a new 96 on our shores (the V4 had been an option for a couple of years prior to that). Someone grabbed the 65-horsepower V4 before I reached this car.
1999 Saab 9-3 Viggen is a Swede worth remembering on MotorWeek
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