Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

1961-1964 Ford Galaxie Custom 500 Nos Rod Bearings C3az-6211-b on 2040-parts.com

US $12.99
Location:

Toledo, Ohio, United States

Toledo, Ohio, United States
Brand new, still in original Ford boxes
Part Brand:Ford Warranty:No Manufacturer Part Number:C3AZ-6211-B Country/Region of Manufacture:United States UPC:Does Not Apply

1961-1964 Ford Galaxie Custom 500 NOS rod bearings C3AZ-6211-B

Product Description

NOS genuine Ford standard size rod bearings (red), part number C3AZ-6211-B. There are nine of these bearings in this auction.

I'm a little confused as to the listing in the Ford parts book on these rod bearings. These are standard size, red type, listed as having three oil holes, and listed for late 1963 and 1964 223 six-cylinder engines in Ford Galaxy, Custom 500, Taxi and Police cars.

I have some other rod bearings listed this week that are blue type, with a different part number, and are also for some of the same years, but have two oil holes.

One parts book lists both of these as fitting 1961 through 1964, the other parts book lists them as 1961 through early 1963, with the other set being late 1963 through 1964.

Hopefully, you know better than me what these really are.

Brand-new, still in original Ford boxes. 1961 1962 1963 1964

Click here to Enlarge
Shipping - Payment

A few words to make things easier.

Combined shipping for multiple auctions is always available, but eBay's rules have made this unnecessarily more complicated for both of us than what you would think.  When you find several items that you would like to buy, the only way to escape eBay charging you all the separate shipping fees (one for each auction) for multiple auctions, is for me to modify those auctions, and that has to be done BEFORE you click to buy them.  Once you have clicked to buy them, it is too late, and eBay has them set in stone - permanently unchangeable!

All you have to do is to email me ahead of time with the items and auction numbers (GOT to have those auction numbers!).  At that point, I can modify the auctions to remove the "immediate payment required".  And I will email you back to let you know this step is done.  Then you can click to win them without immediately paying (and including separate shipping charges).  After you're done clicking to win them all, I can then send you an invoice with a combined shipping charge.  Again, you will have to wait just a little bit for the invoice to arrive in your email.  If we're lucky, this whole process could take just minutes, if both of us happen to be at our computers at the same time.

If all this sounds just a little too complicated or bothersome, you can just ignore it, and click to win as many as you want.  However, I cannot refund the excess shipping amounts that eBay will collect from you, if you don't allow me to modify the auctions.

All this is an effort to help you save some money.

Thanks for your bid.

inkFrog logoinkFrog logo
inkfrog terapeak

Ferrari F12 Berlinetta to be auctioned for Sandy victims

Fri, 09 Nov 2012

Ferrari is doing its part to help Hurricane Sandy victims by auctioning off the first F12 Berlinetta that will be sold on American soil. The base price of Ferrari's halo model is about $315,000. We'd expect this one to go for much more than that.

Renault Laguna Facelift (2011)

Fri, 03 Sep 2010

The Renault Laguna Facelift 2011 - will; debut at the Paris Motor Show Just like yesterday with the Citroen C4 Picasso Facelift, this Renault Laguna Facelift is about having new product to show to the world at the Paris Motor Show in a few week’s time. After all, the Paris Motor Show is as much Renault’s home show as it is Citroen’s (or Peugeot’s, for that matter) So we get a Renault Laguna tweaked to take it in to 2011, some three years after the Laguna first hit the road. The easiest way to make a car look fresh is a nose job, and that’s exactly what the 2011 Laguna gets.

Concept Car of the Week: Honda Kiwami (2003)

Fri, 11 Apr 2014

As part of Honda's exploration into new, clean-performing technologies, the Kiwami concept was created to test public acceptance of the idea of a large, fuel cell-powered luxury sedan.  Unveiled in 2003, the simple yet striking design seemed like a Japanese twist on the Renault Vel Satis concept, which shared a similar wedge profile, wide stance and minimalist approach.  However, the Kiwami found its own interpretation of modern luxury, expressed through elegantly integrated technology rather than with crystal champagne glasses.  Up front, a full-width LED strip headlamp sat flush with the flat bonnet and the rectangular bumper to create a design of primitive beauty.  Further examples of the same simple Japanese aesthetic are found around the car, including the uncluttered body panels and a full-width tail-lamp graphic that matched the front theme.  The dramatic proportions of the interior were closely related to the package of the hydrogen power plant. Unlike other manufacturers at the time, Honda engineers did not create a 'skateboard' fuel cell chassis below the cabin. Instead, a sideways H-shaped layout for the control unit, ultracapacitor, fuel cell stack, hydrogen storage and other components was used, helping to create a lower center of gravity.