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Very Clean Low Milage 1982 308 Gtsi Ferrari on 2040-cars

Year:1982 Mileage:24387
Location:

Roxbury, Connecticut, United States

Roxbury, Connecticut, United States

 

As you can see the car is in excellent shape 24,000 miles.  I am the second owner bought it with 600 miles in 1986. This car has virtually never seen a rain drop,  maintained and stored with well-known and respected Ferrari expert Sport Auto owned and operated by Francois Sicard Ridgefield, CT.   The engine runs excellent, very smooth & very strong.

All  records, original tool kit and Ferrari car cover will go with the car.  All belts, parking brake, and brakes replaced within the last 5 years.  The tires have less than 5000 miles wheels are immaculate, clean undercarriage. All the electrical is in good working condition with an after-market Kenwood radio.. Air conditioner is questionable never turned on why it was ever an option I will never know the car is to be driven with the top off.  Nice Black interior w/ red piping. This is a North American version with the speedometer only going to 85 then it is all red this was the law back then.  Trust me top end far exceeds 85 mph. The paint looks better that what you see in the pictures.

As I stated, the car drives very good, very strong and very tight no weird noises, no overheating.

Buyer arranges Pick up or shipping please call if you have question 203-470-4753

 

Auto Services in Connecticut

Valenti Motors Inc ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, New Car Dealers, Automobile Body Repairing & Painting
Address: 600 Straits Tpke, Beacon-Falls
Phone: (860) 274-8846

Tires Plus Wheels ★★★★★

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Address: 888 Wethersfield Ave, South-Glastonbury
Phone: (860) 296-9799

Story Brothers Inc ★★★★★

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Phone: (860) 225-0159

South Valley Auto ★★★★★

Used Car Dealers, Automobile Customizing, Wholesale Used Car Dealers
Address: 1109 S Main St, Torrington
Phone: (860) 482-2317

People`s Auto LLC ★★★★★

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Address: 23 Field Rd, Ellington
Phone: (860) 265-6861

Pandolfe`s Auto Parts ★★★★★

Automobile Parts & Supplies, Automobile Parts & Supplies-Used & Rebuilt-Wholesale & Manufacturers, Used & Rebuilt Auto Parts
Address: 525 Christian Ln, South-Windsor
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Auto blog

Ferrari releases teaser video for 458 Speciale

Thu, 22 Aug 2013

As is the specs weren't enough, Ferrari is helping us get ready for the reveal of the 458 Speciale at the Frankfurt Motor Show with a short teaser video. You won't get much in the way of a full-body modeling session, naturally, but there are plenty of close-ups of its intakes, scoops, vanes, seriously racy bucket seats and lots and lots of carbon fiber.
And showing how omnipresent on-camera surveillance can sometimes be a good thing, the harder 458 has already been caught being tinkered with in digital photos taken at Maranello. For the moving pictures, however, there's that video below.

Video proof that LaFerrari has a pure electric mode

Mon, 20 Oct 2014

Typically, a hybrid car, with its gas engine and an electric motor/battery pack is able to run on both forms of propulsion independently of each other. That means you can sip gas, run on pure electricity or some variation there of. The Ferrari LaFerrari is not like other hybrids.
See, the successor to the Enzo has batteries, an electric motor and a great, thumping V12 engine, but unlike its rivals from McLaren and Porsche, it has no standalone electric mode. That's been Ferrari's party line since day one. But have the Italians been exaggerating a bit? Judging by this video, it seems like a real possibility.
The video comes from what we're guessing is a European track day. It shows a black LaFerrari stealthily sailing through a tunnel on pure electric power, which it shouldn't be able to do, before its 789-horsepower V12 fires to life.

2014 Ferrari F12 Berlinetta

Tue, 18 Feb 2014

Most cardiologists and physiologists maintain that a human's maximum heart rate is calculated with a mathematical formula: subtract a person's age from 220. But some leading doctors are now questioning the established academics, which trace their origins back to 1970, claiming that a simple formula isn't accurate for people of all ages, in particular those who are older. Rather than endorse the time accepted calculation, this progressive group argues that maximum heart rate equals 208 minus 0.7 times age.
While medical science continues its debate, I recently discovered a more elementary approach that disregards age and physical condition, and it requires no math.
To reveal a human's true maximum heart rate, I propose strapping test subjects into the driver's seat of a Ferrari F12 Berlinetta and then firing up its ferocious V12.