Audi Repair Shop Doylestown
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The idea of a Korean
seemed a bit odd to most American car shoppers when the
debuted on these shores in the 2001 model year. The XGs were pretty good cars, though, and the reasonable price tags had great appeal. The
‘s Kia-badged cousin,
, made the scene for the 2004 model year and was available here through 2009. Non-perfect examples have
hard, and so this crashed ’06 in California now supplies parts from a self-service wrecking yard.
The
face shows a lot of
and
influence, so much of it that many 24 Hours of Lemons racers were enraged that the judges put
a shiny, good-running “E-Class”
in the slowest racing group at the
(where the Amanti blew both head gaskets several minutes into the race, if not earlier).
licensed the
family of V6 engines during the late 1980s, and this 200-horsepower, 3.5-liter DOHC V6 sure looks a lot like the Mitsu 6G74.
The MSRP on the 2006 Amanti was a mere $27,995, which was just a bit more than an ’06
LTZ … and about half the cost of a new ’06
E350 sedan. This was a lot of car per dollar when it was new.
Nowadays, of course, there’s nothing particularly odd about a
big, swanky South Korean sedan
. The Amanti helped pave the way for this acceptance.
It’s not a
. It’s not a
. It’s not a
. It’s not even a
.
Or is it?
from Autoblog https://ift.tt/2CENQsZ