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

Super Clean All Original 1988.5 Suzuki Samurai Jx - Must See!!!!! on 2040-cars

Year:1988 Mileage:81350
Location:

Denver, Colorado, United States

Denver, Colorado, United States

SUPER SUPER CLEAN ALL ORIGINAL SAMURAI!

UP FOR AUCTION IS AN AMAZING BARN FIND! A SUPER CLEAN 2ND OWNER 1988.5 SUZUKI SAMURAI JX CONVERTIBLE. THIS SAMURAI HAS 81,350 ORIGINAL MILES! THIS THING HAS BEEN TOWED BEHIND AN RV FOR MOST OF ITS LIFE SINCE 1994 AT 41K. THE SEATS ARE ALL IN NEAR PERFECT CONDITION, IT HAS THE ORIGINAL CASSETE PLAYER WITH AFTER MARKET OVER HEAD SOUND BAR. THE AIR CONDITIONING WORK PERFECT! GETS SUPER COLD! YOU WILL NOT FIND ANOTHER SAMURAI IN THIS GREAT OF CONDITION!

PLEASE FEEL FREE TO E-MAIL WITH ANY AND ALL QUESTIONS!

 

Auto Services in Colorado

Wreckmasters Body and Frame ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Automobile Body Repairing & Painting, Truck Body Repair & Painting
Address: 315 S 14th St, Colorado-Springs
Phone: (866) 595-6470

Wizard Transmissions ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Automobile Parts & Supplies, Auto Transmission
Address: 2271 W Evans Ave, Aurora
Phone: (888) 690-3854

Tire Warehouse ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Tire Dealers
Address: 4095 S Santa Fe Dr, Englewood
Phone: (303) 934-2929

Tapp`s Garage ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Automobile Parts & Supplies, Automobile Consultants
Address: 8000 E Mississippi Ave, Aurora
Phone: (303) 752-2880

T & R Towing & Auto Repair ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service
Address: Lochbuie
Phone: (303) 659-6747

Stu Ritter Mercedes-Benz ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, New Car Dealers
Address: 1250 S Inca St, Aurora
Phone: (303) 698-2431

Auto blog

Junkyard Gem: 1996 Suzuki Swift SLOKYO DRIFT Edition

Sun, Jan 3 2021

General Motors sold plenty of rebadged Suzukis over the decades in the United States, starting with the Chevy Sprint in 1985 and continuing with various Geo- and Chevrolet-badged machines into our current century. The one we remember best remains the fuel-sipping Metro, successor to the Sprint and available here through the 2001 model year. The Sprint and Metro were based on the Japanese-market Cultus, and Suzuki put its own badges on this car in the United States for the 1989 through 2001 model years. That was the Suzuki Swift, a car we know best today for its factory-hot-rod version, the Swift GT. Normally, I wouldn't bother to document an ordinary Canadian-built Swift found in a boneyard, but today's Colorado-found Junkyard Gem boasts some interesting custom touches that make it worth our attention. Get ready for… SLOKYO DRIFT! While countless American owners of Integras and Lancers and 240SXs went nuts with JDM-influenced car decor following the release of The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift in 2006, drivers of the tiny and miserably underpowered Metro/Swift econo-commuters felt left out of the party. The owner of this car knew what to do, though: buy some stick-on mailbox letters and slap them on this Swift's hatch. Junkyard-acquired badges adorn every surface of the SLOKYO DRIFT Swift, because why not? It turns out that many Reddit regulars in Colorado spied this car on the street, and so you'll find many references to it on that site. Since any 24-year-old econobox with a manual transmission and a salvage title will be nearly impossible to sell, we can assume this car spent its last few years just one broken part away from The Crusher. Once it needed an expensive repair, it wasn't worth fixing. The original owner's manual and documentation remained in this Swift until the end. It appears that Colorado TV-advertising legend Dealin' Doug moved this iron off his Cherry Creek Dodge lot when it had a mere 5,920 miles on the clock, based on this "Phoney Monroney" I found in the glovebox. 168,925 hard miles later, here it is. At some point, it got totaled, put back together, and stamped with this REBUILT FROM SALVAGE lettering on the door jamb. We think of the Metro/Swift as a three-cylinder car, but many of the later versions got this 1.3-liter "big-block" four-banger under the hood. That's 70 raging horsepower right here. The 5-speed made it more efficient and fun to drive, but killed whatever resale value it may have had.

Buy my Vitara, special-effects pro says in greatest commercial Suzuki never made

Mon, May 8 2017

A month ago, Eugene Romanovsky posted an advertisement to sell "my best friend," his 1996 Suzuki Vitara, also known as the Sidekick in the United States, on YouTube. The 2.1 million people who have viewed the commercial so far may not have actually considered taking the car off his hands, but every one of them has had a good laugh. The production values of the video far surpass the production values that went into the making of the car itself. Romanovsky is a special-effects artist at the creative group Gravity in Tel Aviv. For the remaining few million of you who have not yet seen the #BuyMyViara video, it would be a disservice to tell reveal what's in it. Let's just say there's not much that isn't in it. The car's book value of a couple-grand belies the fact that it is truly the most amazing vehicle ever built. It does, after all, boast 96 horsepower and a manual transmission featuring a low gear. Trust us, just watch the video. Related Video: Weird Car News Suzuki SUV Videos viral video

Japanese motorcycles moving into forced induction

Sat, 30 Nov 2013

While turbocharging and supercharging may be nothing new in the automotive industry, motorcycle engines are almost always naturally aspirated. But even that's beginning to change. At the Tokyo Motor Show last week, two major Japanese companies showed off new forced-induction motorbike engines.
Kawasaki rolled in with a supercharged four-cylinder motorbike engine. It offered little in the way of details, disclosing only that the turbine blades were developed in-house to withstand the heat and vibration of spooling up at motorbike speeds.
Suzuki is taking a different approach, however. Its Recursion concept bike packs a turbocharged 588cc two-cylinder engine with a turbocharger and intercooler. The compact package churns out just under 100 horsepower and 74 pound-feet of torque, packaged into a motorbike that weighs just 384 pounds dry.