Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

1951 Chevrolet Car Coupe Wagon Sedan Complete Grille Trim Chrome Molding on 2040-parts.com

US $725.00
Location:

Whitewater, Kansas, United States

Whitewater, Kansas, United States
Condition:Used Brand:GM Manufacturer Part Number:1951 UPC:Does not apply

This is a good old grille. It would be suitable for a nice original car. The chrome is bright and clean. The silver painted backing structure has some small light surface rust spots. There is a ding by the passenger park light end. It matches the curve of the grille, so it is not glaringly obvious when installed on a finished car. This is a nice part, hard to find in this condition. A restored one would cost twice the asking price.

Caterham Seven Roadsport 150 (2007): first official pictures

Wed, 07 Feb 2007

By Jack Carfrae First Official Pictures 07 February 2007 09:18 Yet another Caterham Seven. What’s the deal with this one? Fancy 0-60mph in 4.9 seconds for less than £18k?

Volkswagen Scirocco unveiled

Mon, 03 Mar 2008

By Mark Nichol First Official Pictures 03 March 2008 20:00 VW has finally taken the wraps off the new Scirocco, 15 years after killing off the last generation coupe. Due to be officially unveiled at Geneva 2008, the Golf-based Scirocco has a pleasingly similar exterior to the Iroc concept shown at the 2006 Paris Motor Show, although the concept’s space-age interior has, predictably, undergone the full production watering-down. How cynical.

One Lap of the Web: Willys CJ2 rat rod, Blade Runner sketchbook and vintage Alpine A110 footage

Mon, 11 Nov 2013

-- Even if you don't remember every nuance of the plot of the 1982 film Blade Runner, or even which of the myriad versions of the film you saw, its powerful visual images and bizarre-but-plausible technologies have likely stuck with you. From glowing umbrellas to the unforgettable flying "spinners," Blade Runner was fascinating look at a future that wasn't. Although technically the film was set in 2019, so we've got a few years for replicant technology, and Los Angeles smog levels, to catch up with fiction.