1919 Year Metal License Plate, Show Car Vanity Tag, Vintage Antique Street Rod on 2040-parts.com
Fort Wayne, Indiana, United States
12" x 6" (Standard size) front license plate. The background is black, on a metal plate, with the logo in 7-year rated vinyl, as shown. Great gift. For use as a vanity plate, or hang it on a garage wall for a durable metal sign. Thanks for looking! |
Other for Sale
- 1920 year metal license plate, show car vanity tag, vintage street hot rat rod(US $20.00)
- Chevrolet red logo stainless steel license plate - chssrd(US $29.94)
- 101st airborne wings license plate - la36(US $14.96)
- Startled yellow smiley face metal license plate(US $18.99)
- Tuf bubble shield clear protective cover(US $7.49)
- John deere black and chrome license plate(US $7.48)
Tesla Roadster Sport announced
Sun, 11 Jan 2009The Tesla Roadster Sport will be available from the summer, for around €112K, and claims a 0-60 time of 3.7 seconds, a 0.2 improvement on the existing Tesla Roadster. The extra power comes from fiddling with the stator in the motor and an increased winding density for less resistance (I’m sure that must make sense if you understand Electric Motors – I’m still stuck on the internal combustion engine – must keep up!). The Tesla Roadster Sport also gets Yokohama Ultra High Performance tyres and some suspension tweaks.
UP Design Vittoria concept
Tue, 31 Jan 2012Former I.DE.A styling manger, Umberto Palermo, unveiled his Victoria concept at the 2012 Qatar motor show. Responsible for both the institute's ERA and Sofia concepts, Palermo has now set up his own design consultancy, UP Design. The Vittoria concept has classical front-engined, rear-wheel drive proportions with a long hood and cab rearward layout.
GM ride-and-drive event puts interns behind the wheel
Fri, 22 Jul 2011Interns here at AutoWeek are fortunate enough to be in and out of all sorts of cars, from the little Fiat 500 to the phenomenal Lexus LFA. But rarely do we get our own event like the Intern Ride and Drive hosted by General Motors in downtown Detroit on Friday. The event, set up and run by GM's own interns, involved summer help from local broadcast-media outlets, newspapers and many Detroit-area automotive publications.