1996 Pontiac Sunfire convertible. BRIGHT RED, 5-speed, cold A/C. (Page 1/1)
atikovi MAY 20, 10:10 PM




100 more pictures at: http://www.fototime.com/inv/DB0154815B5655A

This is a 1996 Sunfire convertible that is clean inside and out. Fully serviced and the A/C blows ice cold. 150 H.P. 2.4L 4 cylinder engine and 5-speed stick. Runs and drives great. Power top in nice shape and glass rear window with defroster. Power windows and locks, cruise, tilt wheel, remote keyless entry, Pioneer CD stereo, American Racing chrome wheels, window tint, cloth seats.

Nearly $1,600 of recent name brand parts and service including:
Mobil 1 oil change
AC Delco oil filter
Throttle body cleaning
New AC Delco platinum spark plugs
New Standard coil housing
New Standard spark plug boot set
New AC Delco fuel filter
New Standard O2 sensor
New AC Delco front brake pads
New AC Delco front brake rotors
Recent Rear brake shoes
New Bendix brake drums
Valvoline Dot 4 brake fluid change
Valvoline Dot 4 clutch fluid change
New AC Delco power window motors
New Strong Arm Trunk lift supports

Will replace the radiator and hoses and change the coolant before selling. Car occasionally has a check engine light for P0442, small evap emissions leak and I’ll check that too.

Price: $2995. Available end of May. Car is in the Washington DC area but could deliver at low cost. atikovi@email.com
Spektrum-87GT MAY 25, 01:23 AM
Is that right? 188k miles?

My best friend had one. Great little cars. Good luck with the sale, brother.

Just a piece of friendly advice though, you're asking nearly double the KBB private party value!
atikovi MAY 25, 09:14 AM

quote
Originally posted by Spektrum-87GT:

Is that right? 188k miles?

My best friend had one. Great little cars. Good luck with the sale, brother.

Just a piece of friendly advice though, you're asking nearly double the KBB private party value!



Yes 188K. And yes you can buy these cars for $1,000 or $1,500 on Craigslist if you can find them, but if it costs you another $2,000 or $3,000 to put it in good condition, it's no bargain. It can cost nearly $1,000 alone just to get the air conditioning system repaired and working.