1939 Chevy Tail Lights (2) Chrome New! Street Rodder on 2040-parts.com
Aurora, Colorado, United States
|
Tail Lights for Sale
- 1939 chevy tail lights (2) primered new! street rodder(US $114.99)
- 1949-1950 ford tail light bezel nos(US $35.00)
- 1963 ford galaxie tail light with backup lenses(US $29.95)
- 1942 desoto tail light lenses(US $100.00)
- A pair of 1967-1972 chevy & gmc pickup tail light lenses d 1(US $24.99)
- 98 99 00 01 02 pontiac trans am firebird ta formula tail lights lites 1999 2000(US $300.00)
Nissan launches new model avalanche
Wed, 14 May 2008Nissan president and CEO Carlos Ghosn plans 60 new models By Tim Pollard Motor Industry 14 May 2008 10:32 Nissan will launch 60 new products in the next five years, the company’s latest business plan reveals. And it'll need every new model it can lay its hands on, amid a profit warning and a 30 percent collapse in profits this year. The company certainly loves catchily titled grands projets; following hot on the heels of the Nissan Revival Plan, Nissan 180 and Value-Up, it’s now announced the Nissan GT 2012 plan – spelling out the company’s strategic aims for the next five years.
2015 Volvo XC90 preview: tech details
Tue, 08 Jul 2014More details about the all-new 2015 Volvo XC90 are continuing to emerge, and the latest concerns the new premium SUV's amazing blend of performance, safety and efficiency. In fact, Volvo says there has never been a seven-seater off-roader to offer such an incredible combination of power and eco-friendliness before. Click through or gallery to read more about the all-new 2015 Volvo XC90
Volkswagen debuts tuned Jettas for SEMA
Tue, 05 Nov 2013It's easy to get the impression that SEMA is all about unattainable and outlandish show cars, ones that will never see the street, but in reality there is plenty of iron (or carbon fiber really) from all sides of all ponds that we could see people driving on the street. And just to reinforce that point, Volkswagen has brought a couple of tuned Jettas to SEMA that could almost pass for stock cars. This being SEMA, all that really means is that you're not looking hard enough -- the subtle cars you see are probably sleepers.