1996 Saab 900se Turbo 5door Auto Black on 2040-cars
Yonkers, New York, United States
Selling my saab because I'm moving back to california and I plan to buy another one when I get there
The car is reliable and runs well but has some issues hence the low price. lots of recent maintenance done synthetic oil changes every 3-4k. car is from NY but currently has clean california title car looks good for its age interior exterior 7/10 a few dents, lots of scratches but paint shines up nice the car is very dirty in pictures. car has clean title never been in a major accident here is the list of issues the car has: Cracked windshield (might replace this soon) AC doesn't work heated seats don't work dash instruments flip out when you hit bumps sometimes again the car car starts runs and drives fine, and will get you where you need to go quickly here is my list of the work I've done in the last 2 years with the car 124000 miles: Oil change mobile 1 full synthetic bosch oil filter New serpentine belt New copper ngk spark plugs 124500: Replaced rear passenger side window regulator Replaced fuel door lock actuator Power seat relay Engine air filter Cabin air filter Idler pulley for serpentine belt New crankcase vent check valve New valve cover gasket installed 126000: New bosch primary o2 sensor New exhaust manifold gasket New exhaust manifold studs Replaced all 4mm vacuum lines Refurbished instrument cluster solder joints and bulbs Cleaned/ refurbished window switch 127000: New bosch 71005 fuel filter Transmission drain/fill with Valvoline dexron6 full synthetic and lubeguard red transmission protector Replaced rear dome light bulb 128000 replaced main crank seal Oil change mobile 1 0w 40 full synthetic mobile 1 oil filter 129000 Upgraded intercooler to pass through design Drained and flushed old coolant replaced with recommended pentosin blue coolant upgraded rear sway bar to genuine saab 22mm model 130000 Replaced crank position sensor Second transmission drain/fill with Valvoline dexron 6 full synthetic 132000 Oil change shell rotella t6 full synthetic bosch oil filter Flushed and replaced brake fluid with recommended ATE dot 4 fluid Replace front sway bar drop link bushings Removed cleaned and overhauled fuel injectors new seals 133000 Replaced inner tie rod bushings 134000 New Monroe shocks/ struts installed 135000 Oil change mobile 1 0w 40 full synthetic bosch oil filter New battery installed with 3 year warrantee |
Saab 900 for Sale
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NEVS, the company that took over Saab, gets new majority owner
Wed, Jan 16 2019Chinese real estate conglomerate Evergrande Group, a key investor behind troubled electric vehicle startup Faraday Future, has acquired a 51 percent stake in NEVS. That's the Chinese-backed Swedish electric vehicle company that purchased the assets of Saab out of bankruptcy in 2012. The investment by subsidiary Evergrande Health Industry Group was valued at the equivalent of $930 million and is expected to help NEVS develop new EVs. Evergrande said it paid the first installment of $430 million on Jan. 15, with the remainder due by the end of the month. The remaining 49 percent stake is controlled by a holding company controlled by NEVS founder Kai Johan Jiang. "It means that NEVS will get a financial (sic) strong main owner who is very interested in developing our vision about green mobility transport solutions for the future," NEVS CEO Stefan Tilk said in a statement. NEVS, short for National Electric Vehicle Sweden, owns production facilities in Trollhattan, Sweden, and Tianjin, China, with another under construction in Shanghai. In late 2017 the company launched what apparently was limited production of the 9-3 EV, an electric vehicle based — you guessed it — on the old Saab 9-3 platform. The company now says it will be built in Tianjin starting later this year, with components coming from Trollhattan. It boasts a 186-mile range, in-car WiFi and a cabin air filter for the notoriously smoggy Chinese air. It also showed a battery-electric 9-3X concept at CES Asia in 2017, which is likely to be its next model pegged for production. The South China Morning Post, citing local media reports, says two of NEVS' models meet the standards for mass production in China. This content is hosted by a third party. To view it, please update your privacy preferences. Manage Settings. Definitely the best promotional video we've ever seen. Evergrande Health first came to Faraday Future's rescue back in 2017 with a promised $2 billion investment, but the two sides later went into arbitration in Hong Kong over a dispute about money following the first infusion of $800 million, leading the automaker to cut staff and wages last year, casting the future of FF into doubt. At the end of 2018, Faraday announced it had entered into a new restructuring agreement with an Evergrande Health subsidiary that sees them end litigation and jettison the previous investment agreement, taking Evergrande's investment in the company to 32 percent.
Boeing, Saab take first flight in T-X trainer 36 months after starting development
Wed, Dec 21 2016This post is appearing on Autoblog Military, Autoblog's sub-site dedicated to the vehicles, aircraft and ships of the world's armed forces. Bringing a new fighter from drawing board to its first flight is generally a lengthy endeavor, taking years of planning and tweaking and engineering. Or, at least it normally does. Boeing and Saab just took their new joint-developed training fighter, the T-X, out for its first spin just 36 months after starting development. According to Saab's deputy program manager for the T-X, Eddy De la Motte, that's half the time it usually takes to get a new jet in the sky. "We went from [critical design review] to first flight in 12 months. We don't do that very much at the Boeing Company," Boeing's program manager for the T-X, Ted Torgerson told Defense News. "I don't want to say it has not been done, but for a manned aircraft to go through a complete production-ready design, that is as fast and as efficient as we've ever been through it." Boeing/Saab's first test flight was a simple, 55-minute matter for Boeing test pilots Steven Schmidt and Dan Draeger. The pair took the plane up to 10,000 feet and hit speeds of 231 knots (265 miles per hour) while running handling checks on the twin-tail, single-engine jet. "I've been a part of this team since the beginning, and it was really exciting to be the first to train and fly," pilot Schmidt said. "The aircraft met all expectations. It's well designed and offers superior handling characteristics. The cockpit is intuitive, spacious and adjustable, so everything is within easy reach." "It was a smooth flight and a successful test mission," Draeger, who rode shotgun in the instructor's seat said in an official release. "I had a great all-around view throughout the flight from the instructor's seat, which is critical during training." Boeing/Saab's T-X is one of four jets competing for the role as the US military's next training aircraft. Northrop Grumman is fielding a clean-sheet design that allegedly flew earlier this year, while Lockheed Martin and Raytheon are modifying existing designs with partners – the South Korean KAI T-50 for Lockheed and the Leonardo M-346 for Raytheon. This content is hosted by a third party. To view it, please update your privacy preferences. Manage Settings. News Source: Defense NewsImage Credit: Boeing, Saab Saab Military
Super sleeper Saab 900 does 174 mph in the standing mile
Sun, 14 Apr 2013Somewhere behind Hennessey setting a new top speed record at this year's Texas Mile with its camouflage Ford GT, a stock-looking 1996 Saab 900T pulled up to the line to see what it could do. The dealer showroom wheels wouldn't offer any indication that the 2.0-liter four-cylinder under the hood was getting help from a Garrett turbocharger, a tuned ECU and E85 gas to put out 465 horsepower at the front wheels.
Knowing that, it shouldn't be too much of a surprise that at the other end of the mile the sky blue Swedish wonder was doing 174 miles per hour. The four-cylinder class at the Texas Mile has plenty such rockets, too, this Swede coming just behind a Dodge Neon that did 175.8 mph. You can watch the Saab do its thing in the video below.