Wednesday, August 21, 2019

Used 2019 Volkswagen Jetta For Sale




LOCATED AT OUR LOT AT 705 NORTH 22ND STREET IN LEBANON, PA! 2000 VOLKSWAGEN JETTA GLS 1.8L TURBO AUTOMATIC SEDAN WITH ONLY 117K MILES! Here at Tiger Auto Sales our mission is treat every visitor like an honored guest in our home. San Diego county customers love the no pressure sales experience at Tiger Auto Sales. Very rare VR6 5speed Manual 4th Gen Jetta with 66,200 miles. 1 owner owned, never abused. 6,000. Garage kept clean inside and out. Just normal dings and scratches. Google it if you don't know it. Fantastic LOW Mileage VW! Runs excellent with a 4Cyl extremely economical motor. Great commuter car or 1st car for a new driver. FOR THE PRICE THIS WOULD MAKE A GOOD CAR TO SPEND A LITTLE TIME AND MAKE IT SUPER NICE. IT RUNS AND DRIVES GOOD , 1ST AND 2ND GEAR ARE A LITTLE BIT STIFF BUT ALL GEARS WORK. Economically priced four door Jetta. 2.0 four cylinder motor and auto trans. runs and drives great. HAS NICE BODY AND INTERIOR, AND VERY LOW MILES.





A more atmospheric shot of the Jetta's interior. You can pick between 10 different interior lighting hues. The Mk1 Jetta really was just a Golf with a trunk. But the Mk7 Jetta is much more differentiated from its equivalent hatchback. Right now, you can only get a Jetta with a 1.4L engine, so it's no speed demon. Unlike this one, which used a version of the forthcoming 2.0L engine to set a time of 210.16 mph (338.15 km/h) at Bonneville, making a new record in the Blown Gas Coupe class. LED headlights are standard across the range. Is there a more quintessentially American Volkswagen than the Jetta? Having grown up in Europe, my default image for VW is the humble Golf. But hatchbacks never really caught on stateside. Until the age of the crossover, you needed a trunk if you wanted to sell, and the Jetta鈥攁 Golf with a trunk鈥攑roved that in spades.





VW has sold way more than three million of them here since 1980, keeping the Jetta nameplate alive in the US market even while it called them Ventos or Boras or Sagitars elsewhere. Now there's a brand-new Jetta on the block, the seventh generation to bear the name. Calling it a Golf with a trunk is underselling it. These days, car companies like VW use architectures, not platforms, and the MQB architecture lets it build Golfs and Jettas but also Atlases, Tiguans, A3s, and TTs, plus some Seats and Skodas we won't see for another 25 years. The architecture fixes some dimensional relationships, including the distance between the front axle and the pedals, for example. But it leaves others free, so a Jetta can be as wide as a Golf but much longer and with a larger wheelbase. That's good, because for now your only choice of engine is a 1.4L turbocharged four-cylinder one. Consequently, the 2019 Jetta is not a car that you want to hustle, even if it does have a Sport mode. Perhaps underscoring that point, I can't even find reference to a 0-60mph time anywhere in VW's press kit for the car.





On the other hand, a slippery body, a relatively low mass, and a small turbocharged four can make for efficient cruising. The EPA rates the Jetta at 30mpg city, 40mpg highway, and 34mpg combined. Based on my drive from Denver to Pikes Peak and back, I have no reason to doubt that. That's not to say Jettas can't be fast. A couple of weeks ago, one broke the 210mph (338km/h) barrier at Bonneville by using a modified version of the 2.0L that will show up in next year's Jetta GLI. Just don't expect 600hp and a braking parachute on the GLI's options list. Car architectures like MQB are about more than just the physical layout of the vehicle鈥攖hey also include all the electronic stuff that we can't do without. That means advanced driver-assistance systems like adaptive cruise control and various collision alerts (blind spots, rear traffic, forward, etc.), but it also means LED headlights that know when to turn themselves on, infotainment, and instruments.