Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

1968 - 1972 Gm A-body Cutlass Chevelle Buick Skylark Front And Back Seats on 2040-parts.com

US $150.00
Location:

Portersville, Pennsylvania, US

Portersville, Pennsylvania, US
:

 

GM ORIGINAL BACK SEATS  FROM A 1971 CUTLASS THE BLACK THE TOP COVERING IS COMING APART FROM BEING IN THE SUN ALL THESE YEARS, THE STEEL UNDERNEATH IS IN GREAT CONDITION, NO RUSTY WEAKENED PARTS,SPRING ARE STILL TRACKS ARE GOOD.JUST SURFACE RUST BEING RINSED OFF AND SITTING IN THE GARAGE.THESE WILL FIT AND BE CORRECT FOR ANY 68 69 70 71 72 GM A BODIED CARS.THE COVERING IS WHAT MAKES THEM DIFFERENT

How the car world salutes military members and marks Veterans Day

Thu, 11 Nov 2010

Eddie Rickenbacker was one of the pioneers of open-wheel racing, and he later owned Indianapolis Motor Speedway. Sandwiched in between, he was one of America's most celebrated flying aces of World War I. With prowess on the track and service to his country, the aviator had four starts at Indy and won the Congressional Medal of Honor.

Hyundai ix35 FCEV Hydrogen Fuel Cell heading for Copenhagen

Tue, 25 Sep 2012

Hyundai has announced that the Municipality of Copenhagen is taking delivery of 15 Hyundai ix35 FCEV as Hyundai roll out the FCEV. We recently reported that Hyundai are planning to have the hydrogen fuel cell powered ix35 – the ix35 FCEV – commercially available by the end of 2012, and that’s on track with the news that Copenhagen is taking fifteen ix35 FCEVs for its fleet. The decision by Copenhagen to take a small fleet of ix35 FCEVs is part of their quest to have a CO2-free city by 2015 (we assume that means all plant life will end), but the important thing is that running hydrogen cell cars round city roads will get rid of NOx and particulates – which is what really matters.

Ford teams up with Heinz for tomato car parts

Wed, 11 Jun 2014

Ford and Getty Images Forget carbonfibre, the new must-have material on your vehicle will soon be tomato fibre – or so Ford and food manufacturer Heinz are hoping. The American carmaker and the food giant have teamed up to "explore the use of tomato fibre to develop a sustainable bio-plastic material for vehicles," bringing environmentally friendly motoring to a whole new level. Ford and Heinz tomato car parts: how will they work?