1991 Chrysler Tc Maserati Base Convertible 2-door 3.0l on 2040-cars
Bogalusa, Louisiana, United States
A
little over 7000 K of these were built in Milan, Italy as a grand touring
convertible from 1989 to 1991. A retail (MSRP) price of $35,500, a hefty price
at the time sent this classic Import into early retirement, but the legend
lives on. There's even a TC owner's car club in the US. The TC features a
detachable fiberglass hard top w/ porthole windows( mine is in great shape) and
a manually operated soft top. Hand-Stitched Italian Leather and surprisingly a
Mitsubishi 3.0 V-6 engine. Std. features included a 10 speaker stereo system w/
cassette(I upgraded to a C/D player, 6 way driver & passenger seats, Power
door, windows, locks & trunk, Cruise Control, tilt whl., Alloy wheels, A/C
etc. My car has cold A/C, Auto trans., NO electrical problems, NO mechanical
problems, NO accidents(original factory paint). Everything works as it should.
Small cosmetic issues include some wear to driver's seat in front bumper rubber
strip, small rock chip in windshield and minor paint chips that are not
noticeable in photo's and wiper arm on passenger wiper is missing & needs
replacing. Driver's windshield wiper works fine. |
Chrysler Cirrus for Sale
- Chrysler town & country '08 walter p. chrysler signature series touring(US $13,000.00)
- 1983 chrysler new yorker 5th ave ed. original paperwork/owners manual 22.9k mi
- 1935 chrysler airflow c3 four door sedan
- 2006 chrysler 300 touring 4 door(US $9,400.00)
- 1935 chrysler airflow c1 coupe
- 1998 chrysler cirrus lxi sedan 4-door 2.5l
Auto Services in Louisiana
Wiggins Auto Collision ★★★★★
Twin Tire Auto Care ★★★★★
Tru Automotive ★★★★★
Toyota of Bastrop ★★★★★
Tony Lee Auto Technicians Inc ★★★★★
Tiger 1 Tire & Svc Ctr ★★★★★
Auto blog
eBay Find of the Day: 1979 Chrysler ETV-1 electric car prototype
Mon, 27 Jan 2014Electric cars may be reaching their time in the sun with successes like the Tesla Model S, but the basic concept goes back to practically beginning of motoring. EVs also saw a brief renaissance in the 1970s when automakers were trying find a way around rising fuel prices. This 1979 Chrysler ETV-1 concept for sale on eBay Motors is a great example from that era.
Built in 1979, designers hoped the ETV-1 would preview what an electric car would look like in 1985. The base price was slated to start at $6,400, or the rough equivalent of $20,536, which seems like an optimistic price. General Electric created the ETV-1's powertrain, and Chrysler was in charge of styling. At the time, the Department of Energy called it "the first advanced four-passenger subcompact experimental electric car."
While it seems ancient compared to today's EVs, the ETV-1 featured regenerative braking and a computer-controlled electric motor. Chrysler reported a 100-mile range at 45 miles per hour with two passengers in the car. The range fell to 75 miles with four passengers. Acceleration was not brisk with Chrysler claiming the run to 30 mph in 9 seconds. Power was stored in 18 lead-acid batteries, and a full charge took 10 hours from a home outlet.
Detroit automakers gain market share simultaneously for first time in 20 years
Wed, 01 May 2013While monthly sales figures might be an easy way of tracking the progression of the auto industry and individual automakers, looking at market share might be more indicative of how each company is actually standing up against its competitors. For the Detroit Three automakers, they have collectively lost almost 30 percent of the market over the last 20 years, but now, for the first time since 1993, Ford, General Motors and Chrysler have each posted market share gains at the same time.
According to Automotive News, Ford's share increased the most by 0.7 percent, GM was up 0.5 percent and Chrysler rose marginally by 0.2 percent, giving the Detroit automakers a total market share of 45.6 percent. As for the Japan's Big Three, the article reports that Toyota is up by 0.7 percent, Nissan is down the same amount and Honda has seen "little change."
Chrysler 300 Glacier edition ready to chill with AWD
Sat, 19 Jan 2013It seems that word is finally out on the redone Chrysler 300, as evidenced by the fact that the model's sales almost doubled last year compared to 2011 (when the distinctive sedan was a little slow out of the gates). One thing that's likely helping the car is a growing number of unique models like the 300S, 300 SRT8 and the new 300C John Varvatos Luxury Edition, and now one more trim has joined the lineup. Initially announced back in September, the 300 Glacier is on sale now with a starting price of $36,845 (*not including a $995 destination charge).
Designed with cold-weather climates in mind, the 300 Glacier is only available with all-wheel drive. Chrysler says the Glacier will run an additional $1,500 over the 300S AWD off which this car is based, but that extra money gets unique 19-inch aluminum wheels, an exclusive Glacier Blue Pearl Coat paint job and special interior treatments including piano black accents and fancier leather seats and stitching. Like the 300S, power from the Pentastar V6 has been bumped up to an even 300 horsepower (up from 292 hp) with the aid of a cold-air induction and freer-breathing exhaust. Naturally, the 363-hp Hemi V8 is still available, too.
For more information, scroll down to check out Chrysler's official press release.