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1949 Ford Owner's Guide-rare on 2040-parts.com

Location:

Lake Ozark, Missouri, United States

Lake Ozark, Missouri, United States
Condition:Used

YOU ARE BIDDING ON A VINTAGE AND ORIGINAL 1949 NEW FORD OWNER'S GUIDE THAT IS IN TERRIFIC TO EXCELLENT CONDITION(SEE PICTURES).   THIS GUIDE IS IN MAP FOLD OUT FORM WHICH WAS THE NORM FOR FORD DURING THIS ERA.  IT HAS ALL THE INFORMATION THAT IS PERTINENT TO THE CARE AND OPERATION OF YOUR NEW 1949 FORD.  IT IS ON FORM 3692 COPYRIGHTED BY THE 1949 FORD MOTOR COMPANY, AND INCLUDES THE WRITTEN WARRANTY ON THE BACK.  A VERY UNIQUE, RARE AND HARD TO FIND ITEM.

Mini Vision concept: what does it say about the brand's future?

Thu, 01 Aug 2013

The sight of Mini design head Anders Warming presenting a holographic, 3D projection of the Mini Vision concept as if appearing in his own cartoon was certainly a new one on us, but it captured the quirky, slightly left-field image the subsidiary of BMW Group has cultivated since its relaunch 13 years ago. As the 'Vision' tag suggests, this is billed as a marker of intent for the brand's future design direction rather than a pre-production teaser of the new Mini hatchback (Cooper in most markets) we'll see later this year. However if the third-generation 'new' Mini doesn't look remarkably similar we'd be amazed, such is the level of productionized detailing on this purely digital model.

Jaguar XKR-S at Geneva

Wed, 23 Feb 2011

The new Jaguar XKR-S Jaguar XKR-S. A more powerful Jaguar XKR. More powerful than even the Jaguar XKR with Speed Pack we reviewed a few months ago. More horses than the limited edition Jaguar XKR 75 from last summer.

Car insurance market condemned by MPs

Fri, 04 Jul 2014

CAR INSURANCE is a "highly dysfunctional market" in which firms' pursuit of profit has led to higher prices for consumers, a report by MPs has said. In some cases, business practices have not been in the consumer interest and have "inadvertently encouraged criminal activity", the report from the House of Commons Transport Committee said. There was no clearer example of this than "insurance firms' willingness to pay compensation for whiplash claims which they suspect are fraudulent without requiring the claimant to undergo a medical examination".