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Xtreme Extended Cab, Custom Paint, Stereo, 18' Wheels, Clean Custom Truck on 2040-cars

Year:2002 Mileage:68500
Location:

2002 S10 Xtreme ZQ8 Package with modifications 

I have owned this truck 2006. I purchased it with 55,305mi. In that time it has only been driven in the summer weather and parked during winters in my garage. I am at the point where I no longer drive it and I feel someone else could really enjoy this truck as I have. I have other vehicles that I'd like to spend time with. Truck has a V6 Vortec motor and automatic transmission. Trans was professionally flushed last year and alignment completed. It is lowered 2" in the front and 3" in the rear over the ZQ* suspension. Truck is a "TRUE XTREME" not a knock off build. Vehicle is currently under a lien from the bank that I used to purchase some shop equipment. Please message me or call with any questions. Thank you 304.670.0361 Call or text

Truck has a professional lowered suspension

18" custom Boyd Coddington staggered Wheels 18x8 and 18x8.5 with 40 series tires (very good tread)

Tinted Windows

Custom Stereo box in extended cab portion

Posi rear end

Chrome Speaker Covers

Painted to Match Interior

Roll Pan

Dual Exhaust with Flowmasters

Hard Tonneau Cover

Custom 2-tone paint with Flame Design

LED taillights

Custom Halo Headlights and Modified Infinity Q35 HID Bi Xenon with factory high beam (upgraded harness) The passenger igniter box is currently out and has not been replaced

Custom flame Design on the Hood

one piece Driveshaft conversion

The Body of the truck in really good shape. Their is no rust underneath, and as I mentioned, it does not see winter weather and maybe 1 rain shower since I've owned it. This truck runs and drives great, Brakes work fine, no problems other than the headlight.

 



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Use this PowerPoint when convincing your spouse to let you buy a Corvette

Thu, 14 Feb 2013

When you are not the one in charge of the purse strings, creativity is a must when trying to get the string-holder to bankroll that next shiny object you just can't live without.
When I was a kid, I decided that life wasn't worth living if it weren't in pursuit of owning a GMC Typhoon. My 12-year-old self crafted a fiscal strategy that, when combined with my offer of a 49-percent share of ownership in the car in return for my parents' contribution of 80-percent of the purchase price, would see me behind the wheel of a Typhoon by the time I hit college. They walked away from the negotiating table and, the economic climate of the 8th grade being what it was at the time, another partner wasn't found before the Typhoon was discontinued.
Roy El-Rayes, however, has succeeded where 12-year-old me failed, and he did it by using the sort of professionalism that only a PowerPoint presentation can provide, along with some humor and bold-faced flattery.

Vert-A-Pac train cars kept your Chevy Vega's price in check

Fri, 01 Mar 2013

Our apologies to those who've seen this before, but for the rest of the class, how awesome are these pictures of the Vert-A-Pac shipping system General Motors came up with to ship the Chevrolet Vega back in the 1970s? Developed along with Southern Pacific Railroad, GM was able to double the amount of Vega models it could ship by packing them into the unique storage cars vertically.
At the time, rail cars could fit 15 vehicles each, but Chevrolet was able to lower shipping costs by making it possible to ship 30 Vegas per rail car, in turn allowing the price of the Vega to remain as low as possible. Each rail car had 30 doors that would fold down so that a Vega could be strapped on, and then a forklift would come along and lift the door into place. All the cars were positioned nose down, and since they were shipped with all of their required fluids, certain aspects had to be designed specifically for this type of shipping, including an oil baffle in the engine, a special battery and even a repositioned windshield washer reservoir. See for yourself in our image gallery above.

Why the Corvette is Chevrolet's billion-dollar baby

Thu, 28 Feb 2013

Edmunds has worked up a piece that tries to figure out just how much the global Chevrolet Corvette economy is worth, a spitballed guesstimate putting the number at more than $2.5 billion with the proviso that the number is probably low. It starts by taking Corvette's new car sales of 14,132 units last year, which would equate to $714,725,900 (including destination) assuming ever car sold was a base coupe with no options. In the final tally, a little extra padding gets that number up to $750,000,000.
But that's not all. Consider this: Many of the almost 1.4 million Corvettes produced over the model's history are still on the road. There are new parts being produced and aftermarket companies like Mid-America Motorworks deaing business, that single Illinois company doing more than $40 million a year in sales. There are the Corvette events large and small, restorers who do nothing but Corvettes, salvage yards that deal only in used Corvette parts and the Corvette magazines where owners find all this stuff.
And then there are the Corvette-themed tchotchkes, every single one of which provides a tiny contribution to the huge licensing royalties that General Motors collects every year. The article admits there's no way to come to an accurate number, but it just goes to show how valuable one specific model can be to a company.