Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

1933 Ford Gauge Panel Speedometer, Amp Gauge, Fuel Gauge on 2040-parts.com

US $500.00
Location:

Camp Verde, Arizona, United States

Camp Verde, Arizona, United States
Condition:Used Brand:Ford

Gauge panel and a complete set of gauges including speedo, amp gauge & fuel gauge. Very good panel with some patina, good for unrestored original car or nostalgia type hot rod. Gauges are all very nice, faces are not faded. 

Call or email for more photos or questions. Mike 719-338-6449

Gauges for Sale

Ford once planned to race fiberglass-bodied Mustang touring cars

Mon, 31 Mar 2014

Tucked away on page nine of the May 9, 1964 issue of Competition Press and Autoweek is an intriguing little story: “FIA Rejects Ford Bid for Homolgation [sic].” At the time, the Mustang had just made its world debut, but Ford was already scheming to fold the car into its “Total Performance” campaign. The automaker apparently proposed to do so with a fleet of crazy fiberglass-bodied touring cars. According to Competition Press, Ford tried to get the new Mustang classified as a touring car for international racing.

Lotus news at 2009 Tokyo motor show

Thu, 22 Oct 2009

Lotus was one of only three foreign manufacturers to exhibit at the 2009 Tokyo show, and as well as shouting about the success of the Evora (including a mention of it scooping CAR's PCoTY title), the company unveiled a special-edition Exige. Called the Exige Stealth is Japan – and the ugly-sounding Scura throughout the rest of the world – it's black all over. There's matt black paint, lots of carbonfibre bits and pieces, and the supercharged Toyota engine pushing out 257bhp.

Concept Car of the Week: BMW Z13 (1993)

Fri, 30 Nov 2012

Rear-mounted engine, three seats, central driving position, 830 kg. What might sound like the ingredients for a fantastic little sports car apply in fact to the exceptionally compact and exciting BMW Z13 concept presented in 1993 at the Geneva motor show. BMW engineers and designers developed a car that combined practicality, innovation, safety, economy and, more importantly, it looks like a lot of fun.