1963 Plymouth Sport Fury Stainless Steel Fender Skirts on 2040-parts.com
Staten Island, New York, US
Stainless Steel Fender Skirts in never used condition. Will fit 1963 - 1964 Plymouth Savoy, Belvedere, Fury, Sport Fury. Also will fit 1965 Plymouth Belvedere. Rare addition for your Mopar! $20.00 shipping in the USA ONLY!
Mouldings & Trim for Sale
- 1951 pontiac chieftain trunk lid trim moulding waterfall 50 52 53(US $39.99)
- 68 69 70 dodge plymouth b-body roof rail weatherstrip trim, mopar charger gtx rr(US $49.95)
- 1951 pontiac chieftain trunk lid handle trim moulding 50 52 (US $29.99)
- 1953 pontiac chieftain front bumper gaurds pair set(US $44.99)
- 1967 camaro weatherstrip vent window (US $120.00)
- Vintage 1947 chevrolet left and right headlight bezels (US $40.00)
Video and design sketch of Honda-badged NSX Concept released
Tue, 07 Feb 2012Honda has revleased a video design sketch of its NSX Concept, due to be unveiled at the 2012 Geneva Motor Show. The company has also released new details concerning the NSX Concept, which was first seen at the Detroit Motor Show sporting an Acura badge. The new NSX is expected to indicate the direction in which they will be heading in terms of the design and technology of Honda's next-generation supercar, widely tipped to be available for purchase in the next few years.
Chrysler posts $370 million net loss on costs tied to repaid loans
Tue, 26 Jul 2011Chrysler Group LLC, after recording its first post-bankruptcy profit three months ago, posted a net loss of $370 million in the second quarter due to costs tied to the repayment of government bailout loans. Chrysler incurred a charge of $551 million in paying back the U.S. Department of Treasury and the Canadian loans that kept the automaker afloat in 2009.
The no-show cars: a reader rant on mad concepts
Wed, 14 Apr 2010Instigated by Harley Earl at General Motors in the late 30s with the quaintly named Buick Y-Job, show cars, or concept cars, were presented to an excited public eager for new things. As the world recovered from a depression and then a war, these vehicles pointed to a better future that many people believed in, including the people who produced them. And, although many of the concept cars of the 50s, with their Jetsons plexiglass roofs and notional nuclear powered engines seem ludicrous now, in their time they weren’t that cynical.