Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

1955 Chevy Led Taillights With Lenses on 2040-parts.com

Location:

Mineral City, Ohio, United States

Mineral City, Ohio, United States
Condition:New

THE ANSWER TO CONVERTING TO LED TAILLIGHTS. TAKE OUT THE EXISTING BULB AND PLUG THE NEW LED BULB CONNECTOR IN. LED LIGHT COME ATTACHED TO THE LENSE. THIS PRICE IS FOR THE PAIR.

Koenigsegg planning an entry-level car – but it’ll still cost £500k

Sat, 26 Apr 2014

Koenigsegg are planning an entry-level car at half the price of the Agera R (pictured) Think of the cars that Christian von Koenigsegg has made since he started with the CC8S in 2002 and you think of them as extremes of the supercar genre; the Swedish engineering take on the bloated and massively complex Bugatti Veyron. Christian’s men in a shed in Sweden have gone on to make a series of progressively quicker and more impressive supercars, through the CCR, CCX and the Agera and on to the current most extreme iteration – the Koenigsegg One:1. But it looks like Christian has decided that his ambition to create the world’s greatest hypercar leaves room for a ‘Lesser’ Koenigsegg, a car that still has innovative engineering and extreme performance but comes at a lower price.

2013 Audi RS6 Avant: 190mph & 0-62mph in 3.9 seconds

Wed, 05 Dec 2012

The 2013 Audi RS6 Avant has been revealed with a V8 552bhp Twin Scroll Turbo delivering 0-62mph in 3.9 seconds and up to 190mph. The 2013 Audi RS6 Avant comes with a 552bhp version of the twin-scroll V8 found in the latest, most powerful Audis (and the Bentley Continental GT V8) which, despite being 28bhp down on the power of the old V10 RS6 (although it does have 37lb/ft more torque – 516lb/ft) can get to 62mph in a supercar-bashing 3.9 seconds and, in standard guise, 155mph. But spend more than the £77k Audi will want for the new RS6 Avant by opting for the Dynamic Package and top speed increases to 174mph.

UAW: GM, Chrysler may not need additional federal funds

Tue, 06 Jan 2009

UAW President Ron Gettelfinger said today that General Motors and Chrysler LLC may not need additional federal loans beyond the $17.4 billion approved by the White House. "If we can get by without more money, that's what we want to do," Gettelfinger told Automotive News in an interview at Solidarity House in Detroit. He said how well the money holds out will depend on sales volume this year.