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

1971 Lamborghini Espada 2 Door on 2040-cars

US $22,470.00
Year:1971 Mileage:9229 Color: White /
 Black
Location:

Copperhill, Tennessee, United States

Copperhill, Tennessee, United States

1971 Lamborghini Espada Coupe this is one of the most original Lambo's you will ever find. The car is all original
and has 9,229 original miles. The car has been off the road since 1976. The car was purchased and cleaned up no
paint or body work was performed. The car does run very well all the Webber carbs have been rebuilt.

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Wurster`s Foreign Car Repair ★★★★★

Auto Repair & Service, Automobile Diagnostic Service, Automobile Inspection Stations & Services
Address: 1107 Harpeth Industrial Ct, Franklin
Phone: (615) 208-5654

White`s Tire & Auto Care ★★★★★

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Watsons Auto Sales Warren County ★★★★★

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Victory Motors ★★★★★

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Valdez Motorsport ★★★★★

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Toyota of Kingsport ★★★★★

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Address: 2525 E Stone Dr, Church-Hill
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Auto blog

Lamborghini's Huracan quicker than its costlier Aventador?

Mon, 25 Aug 2014

Car and Driver threw a leg over the Lamborghini Huracán and rode it hard all around the 16-turn Circuito Internationale Nardò, next to the banked oval that's brought us many a top-speed video. On the way to discovering the bull calf sweetly eclipses the Gallardo it replaces, CD also discovered that - comparing their own tests - it is faster from zero to 60 miles per hour than its paterfamilias, the Aventador.
Now, we should all know that 0-60 tests are an imprecise discipline, but CD's Eric Tingwall torched the sprint in the Huracán in 2.5 seconds - yes, faster than a whole lot of other very expensive super-coupes. In the magazine's last instrumented test of the Aventador Aaron Robinson ran 3.0 seconds, and for more Aventador perspective we can compare Motor Trend's 2.8 seconds, also scored at Nardo, Road & Track at 2.7 seconds and Lamborghini's estimated 0-62 mph time of 2.9 seconds. Any way you chop that up, 2.5 seconds beats it. A bit of a shock, then: Lamborghini lists the Huracán's 0-62 mph time as 3.2 seconds.
We'll get a more precise idea of the discrepancy when more tests come online, but for the moment - and in this one respect - we've got the $241,945, 602-horsepower Huracán showing its angry backside to the $397,500, 691-hp Aventador. Even if it remains true, though, we're not sure it matters; in a figurative case of Predator versus Alien, it's arguable that the only way to be wrong is not to own one.

Lamborghini confirms Veneno Roadster is coming

Mon, 19 Aug 2013

As it turns out, there might just be more than three lucky souls on the planet who will be able to claim ownership of a Lamborghini Veneno. While Lamborghini still plans to make triplets out of the winged and vented hypercar, we hear that there is a Veneno Roadster in the works.
Early yesterday, our own Matt Davis caught wind of an open-top Veneno, but Car and Driver has some more details about the car. The article says that a total of nine Veneno Roadsters could be built with each carrying a price tag of around $4.4 million US. If you're keeping track at home, that's a premium of a cool half-million bucks to get the Veneno to go topless, and with all three of the coupes already accounted for, we're sure Lamborghini won't have a hard time unloading the Roadsters.
There is no additional information about the Lamborghini Veneno Roadster, but if we had to guess, we'd figure it will likely use some lightweight removable roof panels like the Aventador Roadster.

2013 Lamborghini Aventador LP 700-4 Roadster

Thu, 14 Feb 2013

What Dreams May Come
The Lamborghini Aventador LP 700-4 Roadster left me stupefied. Despite my experience with countless other high-powered exotics on a variety of racing circuits, including nearly all of its Gallardo siblings, the all-wheel-drive, 700-horsepower flagship dropped my jaw to the ground.
Less than 24 hours earlier, I had been sitting on an airplane at 39,000 feet studying press releases about the Italian automaker's newest range-topping convertible. While everything looked spectacular on paper, I was genuinely concerned that its new cylinder deactivation system and open-roof configuration would spoil some of the fun - soften its personality, to be more specific.