2004 Honda Odyssey Ex Mini Passenger Van 5-door 3.5l on 2040-cars
Ellendale, North Dakota, United States
Selling a 2004 Silver Honda Odyssey. V6, VTEC, 3.5 Liter, Automatic Transmission, ABS (FWD), Air conditioning, power windows and locks, cruise control, power steering, Stereo and CD/DVD system installed. (radio and DVD are not working at this time but may be an easy fix. Over-all good condition, drives great, Has been a one family car. The front bumper has a small crack but still looks good. This vehicle has not been in any accidents. There is a scratch on passenger side that can be fixed with paint or something. Brand new battery. Tires are a year old. Then Engine and transmission have been rebuilt in last 4 years. Has 130,000 miles. Great family car. Traveling for work in required 4 wheel drive, that's why selling.
Buyer will pick up in person or pay for shipping vehicle. This car has had 1 owner. |
Honda Odyssey for Sale
- 2013 honda odyssey touring, rare tv/dvd, mercedes-benz dealer, l@@k at this van!(US $37,991.00)
- 2005 honda odyssey ex-l,leather,dvd,power doors,warranty,see video,free shipping(US $10,999.00)
- 2005 honda odyssey ex-l automatic 4-door van ***** no reserve*****
- 2012 honda odyssey touring 3.5l v6 24v navigation rse dvd front wheel drive(US $29,991.00)
- 2003 honda odyssey ex-l heated leather seats 1 owner - clean carfax(US $6,999.00)
- 2011 honda odyssey "no reserve" one owner
Auto Services in North Dakota
Veracity Motors ★★★★★
O`Reilly Auto Parts ★★★★★
Hollen Auto Body ★★★★★
Certified Auto Repair ★★★★★
Buy-Rite Auto Sales ★★★★★
Quality Auto Body Shop ★★★★
Auto blog
Minivan market not what it used to be, but margins make up for it
Thu, 05 Jun 2014
Residual values for last year's minivans are higher than they were in 2000.
Much like the station wagon was the shuttle of Baby Boomer generation, the minivan has been the primary means of transport for Generations X and Y. Just as the boomers abandoned the Country Squire, though, those kids that were toted around in Grand Caravans and Windstars are adults, and they certainly don't want to be seen in the cars their parents drove.
Watch Honda lay waste to world's fastest lawnmower record
Wed, 02 Apr 2014Honda has been working on its high-performance Mean Mower for a while now. In a recent attempt to take the top speed title, it didn't make its 130-miles-per-hour top speed target, but it still managed to set a new Guinness World Record has the world's fastest lawnmower at 116.57 mph. While the video certifying the run was uploaded to YouTube on April 1, this is no prank. The Guinness run was made on March 8 at the Idiafa Proving Ground in Tarragona, Spain.
To claim the record, the lawnmower had to run through a 100-meter speed trap, and it had to make two passes in opposite directions within an hour with the average taken between them. Guinness also specifies that to take the title the vehicle must still be able to cut grass and look like a lawnmower. The speed was still plenty to beat the previous record of 96.529-mph set by Bobby Cleveland on a Snapper race mower at the Bonneville Salt Flats in September 2010.
The Mean Mower is based on a Honda HF2620 Lawn Tractor that's been modified by British Touring Car Championship squad Team Dynamics. It has a newly fabricated chassis from 4130 chromoly steel and packs a 1.0-liter engine from a Honda VTR Firestorm motorcycle with a six-speed sequential gearbox. The engine produces 109 horsepower and 71 pound-feet of torque - enough power to reach 60 mph in around four seconds. The suspension and wheels come from an ATV, and the cutter deck has been remade in fiberglass. The grass bag holds the fuel tank, oil cooler and secondary radiator. The engine no longer actually cuts grass. Instead, the blade is driven by two electric motors.
Acura ILX headed for Civic-like early upgrades
Wed, 12 Dec 2012The not-yet-ready-for-primetime 2012 Honda Civic saw it quickly returned to sender for refurbishment, now the Acura ILX is headed in the same direction in its very first year. Automotive News reports that the small, Civic-based sedan from Honda's luxury brand isn't meeting sales expectations, with an annualized rate of 22,000 to 24,000 sales instead of the 30,000 the company is after. More telling is that the ILX "is being outsold by the Buick Verano, Volkswagen CC and Audi A4," and, except for two months since it launched, it has also been outdone by the Acura TSX it is meant to replace.
Part of the cause has been the 2.0-liter, four-cylinder engine: its 150 horsepower to motivate a sedan that can weigh up to 2,970 pounds doesn't offer the kind of performance or value experience that buyers in the segment respond to. Another big issue is that the top-level 2.4-liter engine is only offered with a six-speed manual even though most buyers of the highest trim don't really want to shift their own gears. Lastly, the ILX might not put enough space between it and its frugal underpinnings - our first drive review pegged it as "the world's nicest Honda Civic."
An automatic transmission is on the way for the 2.4-liter, but it isn't clear when. And while Honda admits that the 2.0-liter is underpowered and Automotive News says it's on the way out, the company hasn't yet said how that situation will be corrected.