1959 - 1975 Timken Agricultural Equipment Parts Catalog W Applications Part Numb on 2040-parts.com
Hightstown, New Jersey, US
|
Mustang for Sale
- 1997 ford mustang gt cobra service shop manual set w specs & bulletins book oem(US $119.09)
- 1997 ford mustang gt cobra service shop manual set w specs & bulletins book oem(US $119.09)
- 1960 - 1970 timken highway vehicles trucks buses trailers bearings catalog w app(US $24.99)
- 1960 - 1970 timken highway vehicles trucks buses trailers bearings catalog w app(US $24.99)
- 1965 - 1975 timken shop trucks construction equipment logging mining catalog(US $24.99)
- 1967 cougar sequential taillight turn signal wiring diagrams shop manual (US $29.95)
One Lap of the Web: new imports, old imports
Wed, 27 Nov 2013-- The 1956 Maserati A6G-2000 Allemano is as beautiful as it is rare, and if Jay Leno didn't take one for a spin in this video, we probably wouldn't see one until next year's Pebble Beach Concours d'Elegance. -- Simon Cowell (of Simon Cowell fame) bought a Bugatti Veyron three years ago because a friend told him its a good idea, and he's driven it a total of two times since. Not driven it at its maximum speed, but just driven period.
BMW i8 EV sold out until 2015
Mon, 25 Nov 2013BMW i8 EV sold out until 2015 BMW’s i3 city car EV is now starting to hit the road, and the next instalment for BMW’s EV outing is the i8 Supercar, revealed at the Frankfurt Motor Show in September. Sales for the i3 have started very strongly, and it looks as though the i8 has an even stronger start with BMW confirming the whole of the first year’s run if the i8 are already spoken for. That’s despite the BMW i8 starting at almost £100k in the UK, but the i8 does have a lot going for it.
Where did the word 'automobile' come from?
Mon, 06 Jan 2014On Jan. 3, 1899, the New York Times printed the word "automobile" upon its austere pages. It wasn't the first publication to do so; Scientific American used the phrase "automobile carriage" in a May 14, 1898, review of the Winton Motor Carriage, but the Grey Lady -- a more influential publication -- was the first to debate the term.