Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

1954 Chrysler Passengers (rh) Side Headlight Door on 2040-parts.com

US $10.00
Location:

Foxboro, Massachusetts, US

Foxboro, Massachusetts, US
Returns Accepted:ReturnsNotAccepted Part Brand:Chrysler Manufacturer Part Number:CB 22590 RH (casting #) Placement on Vehicle:Right

Very nice used 1954 Chrysler passengers side headlight door.

Chrome has very slight pitting. Parking light lens is crazed.

Please email or call 508-380-7171 with questions.

Thank you.

Motorists Still Paying A High Price At The Pumps

Fri, 17 Jan 2014

THE LATEST report from the AA highlights the depressing fact that motorists continue to cough up when filling up at the pumps. According to the motoring organisation, average petrol prices at the pumps are staying "stubbornly above" 130p a litre despite discounts in many areas. While a number of fortunate motorists have been getting petrol for around 128p a litre of late, the average price nationwide is 130.46p a litre, the AA said.

Audi Q7 Project by Project Kahn

Sat, 06 Nov 2010

The Audi Q7 Project by Project Khan Having worked over the products of Land Rover in recent years to keep the orange inhabitants of Cheshire loftily mobile, Project Khan has now decided that Audi is deserving of its gifts and has set about ‘Khan-ising’ the Audi Q7. And actually, in many ways, the Audi Q7 benefits from some of Khan’s work. The Audi Q7 isn’t the most iconic or visually appealing SUV on the planet, and rather than detracting from what’s on offer some aspects of the Audi Q7 Project do enhance.

Avoiding the California Highway Patrol on the Autoweek America Adventure

Sun, 30 Oct 2011

"Damn revenuers," said Tommy Kendall. "They are draped all along the side of the road." He spoke, of course, about the California Highway Patrol, whose strategically positioned cars--and subsequent laser-detection devices and KA-band radar--were lighting up this two-lane south of Klamath Falls, Ore., less than two miles inside the state line. It's a fact of economics, especially in California, a state that's running out of money faster than Greece.