1960-90s 12 Volt Battery Post Protectors. (5) on 2040-parts.com
El Sobrante, California, United States
Did you loose yours and can't find anything that fits right?. Cheap price,Do you need these?.............
|
Fog/Driving Lights for Sale
- New pair small vintage style amber color fog lights with visors 6-volts !(US $69.99)
- New single chrome metal vintage style dummy spot light !(US $34.99)
- New pair of small 6-volt vintage style clear color fog lights with visors !(US $69.99)
- New pair of small clear color vintage style driving lights in 12-volts !(US $59.00)
- New pair small vintage style amber color fog lights with visors 12-volts !(US $69.99)
- New pair small vintage style clear color fog lights with visors in 12 vols ! b/t(US $69.99)
Volvo strikes deal for plug-in hybrid cars
Mon, 01 Jun 2009Volvo Plug-in hybrid By Peter Adams Motor Industry 01 June 2009 17:15 Volvo has taken its next step towards green motoring, launching a joint venture with Swedish energy company Vattenfall to introduce plug-in hybrid cars to the market – sporting CO2 emissions as low as 50g/km. The cars, which will role out across Sweden in 2012, will be manufactured by Volvo, with Vattenfall developing the charging systems and supplying the cars with electricity. Vattenfall will be offering customers the chance to sign an agreement for renewable electricity sourced from windpower or hydropower.
Aston V12 Zagato confirmed for production in 2012
Fri, 08 Jul 2011Aston Martin has confirmed production of the V12 Zagato – yours for £330,000, plus local taxes. It will build just 150 examples will be hand-built at Gaydon, with first deliveries expected in summer 2012. An aluminium and carbonfibre body is designed to echo the 1960 DB4 GT Zagato.
'Crash for cash' scams soar by 51%
Wed, 18 Jun 2014THE NUMBER of "crash for cash" car insurance scams uncovered by a major insurer surged by 51% annually last year. Aviva said it had detected around 820 staged accidents in 2013, leading to some 2,200 fraudulent personal injury claims. It is pressing for tougher penalties and said that often, rather than being locked up, fraudsters end up being sentenced to community orders, which "do little" to deter them from re-offending.