Cheap car For Sale 2005 Nissan Frontier 3.0 (Salaya) THB310000
- City: Bangkok
- Country: Thailand
- Listed: March 11, 2011 9:06 am
- Expires: This ad has expired
This is a well cared for forest green 2005 Nissan Frontier 3.0 King Cab M-Fire pick up truck. It has manual transmission/vinyl seats/a pioneer CD/USB stereo It has around 140,000 KMs and has had a single owner (Western). It has been regularly checked and maintained throughout and has never been in an accident. Compare it to what you see at the tents and consider the risks of buying a vehicle with a number of unknown owners from a used car dealer or a vehicle that has had a single Western owner with regular oil changes. Location: Salaya it’s NOT ok to contact this poster with services or other commercial interests
Read more from the original source:
2005 Nissan Frontier 3.0 (Salaya) THB310000
A new car depreciates quickly in the first few years and after 3 years, it is worth only about 60-70% of the original price. However, there is a price to pay: Diesel engines are a bit noisier and there always will be that not very pleasant smell from the exhaust.
Choosing the “best” car means finding the right combination of those factors that are most important to you.
The right car for one is not the right car for another.
If you normally need only two seats, a Honda Civic coupe, or Mazda3 might be ideal.
In Thailand a quick driving plan can involve changing the flow of traffic, which causes one way roads to suddenly run in the opposite directions or the number of lanes being reduced from, in extreme cases, eight to one. Regular roads may become bus lanes overnight, which then causes thousands of drivers to exit from the incorrect ramps on the expressway, thus clogging up traffic worse than before. Usually this last for a few months, after which the government changes or they governor realizes that the problems can not be solved and then things go back to normal. Several computer traffic control systems have been tested of even installed, but none of them seem to resolve the situation. It has been whispered that the local traffic constables are very uncooperative when it comes to these systems that could make their employ obsolete. Some companies may even mention the word “sabotage”, when asked about the failure of their traffic control system.
Incoming search terms for the article: