Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Toyota 4wd 4x4 Four Wheel Drive Emblem on 2040-parts.com

US $3.99
Location:

Montpelier, Virginia, US

Montpelier, Virginia, US
Returns Accepted:ReturnsNotAccepted Brand:Toyota Manufacturer Part Number:7531116230 Placement on Vehicle:Array Surface Finish:plated, painted plastic Warranty:No Country of Manufacture:Unknown

A nice part! Seems to be an original equipment (OE) Toyota truck emblem, I am not certain which model or year it will fit, you be the judge, may or may not fit Tacoma or Tundra, may fit an SUV.   I presume the number I supplied and it is cast on the back is a part number, feel free to ask questions, happy to try to answer them all. Good luck!  I will ship anywhere as long as you pay for it.

Steering Wheels & Horns for Sale

Volvo to launch new F1-inspired engine range

Thu, 29 Aug 2013

Volvo has revealed an all-new super-efficient range of engines called DRIVE-E. When launched later this year, the new motors will become some of the most high-tech engines on sale. Uniquely, the new engine range is based around just two basic four-cylinder designs – one direct-injection petrol engine and one common rail turbodiesel.

2012 Fiat Panda starts at £8,900

Tue, 07 Feb 2012

The new Fiat Panda starts at under £9k The 2012 Fiat Panda will cost from £8,900 for the POP 1.2 8v 69 CV, rising to £12,250 for the Panda Lounge 1.3 MultiJet 75 CV in the UK. The 2012 Fiat Panda was unveiled at the Frankfurt Motor Show last Autumn, and looks as though it’s going to continue the Panda tradition of simple motoring at affordable prices with the news that the starting point for the new Panda will be £8,900 for the entry-level Panda POP 1.2 8v 69 CV. Even the top-of-the-range Panda Lounge 1.3 MultiJet 75 CV comes in at a not too unreasonable £12,250, with another eight models in between the two extremes offering variations of trim and engines to suit sensible urbam motoring.

Concept Car of the Week: Lancia Bertone Sibilo (1978)

Fri, 02 Aug 2013

The second half of the ‘70s saw automotive design fall into an era of uninspired and uninspiring economic cars finished with cheap plastic add-ons and stuffed with beige itchy fabrics. Working from the little Bertone studio in Turin, it seems Marcello Gandini didn't get the memo and carried on drawing futuristic wedgey supercars. With the Sibilo, he pushed his signature angular style to a new level of modernity.