HERE IS A REAR SPOILER THAT HAS SOME SMALL NICKS AND SCRATCHES, BUT OVER ALL VERY NICE, NEVER USED. NO WARR, SHIPS LOWER 48, PAYPAL.
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Spoilers & Wings for Sale
- 1979 1980 1981 firebird/trans am front fender wheel flares/spoilers(US $99.00)
- 1970 - 1977 firebird/trans am after market driver side front fender wheel flare(US $89.00)
- 1969 chevrolet camaro / pontiac firebird fiberglass rear spoiler(US $103.94)
- 1979 79 80 81 pontiac trans am rear wheel flare(US $90.00)
- 2017 chrysler pacifica front tinted hood air deflector bug shield mopar oem(US $194.90)
- Mopar 1970 plymouth cuda aar rear ducktail style spoiler with hardware - new(US $209.95)
One Lap of the Web: A wiseguy in a Cadillac
Fri, 02 May 2014-- Not many car reviews feature a shot-for-shot remake of "Goodfellas." (We're still banking on Ford's re-introduction of the Crown Victoria for a shot-for-shot remake of Beastie Boys' "Sabotage.") Matt Farah of the Smoking Tire did for its review of the Cadillac CTS V-Sport, which took four days to shoot and six to edit, and probably three more to steal the dolly cam from Scorsese's basement. -- You might not remember the Saturn Pioneer, but back in 1979, "the new marque Saturn was developed to play on the increased attention to astronomy NASA's deep space probes were generating," writes automotive historian/inveterate liar Jason Torchinsky. One of GM's many H-Body cars, the Pioneer -- named after the probe, not the Probe -- carried an innovative version of GM's venerable "Iron Duke": it had both a carburetor and throttle-body fuel injection, which undoubtedly added needless complexity that could have better served the real Rocket Division, Oldsmobile.
The new Jaguar XJ – its creators' guided tour
Thu, 09 Jul 2009By Tim Pollard First Official Pictures 09 July 2009 20:30 Mike O’Driscoll, Jaguar managing director ‘We are remaking Jaguar. It started a few years ago with the XK and the XF has become the cornerstone of rebuilding Jaguar. Our next step is this new XJ – it’ll help us transform Jaguar into a sporting company.
Survey reveals in-car climate clashes
Wed, 20 Aug 2014CLIMATE change isn’t just leading to arguments in politics – it’s causing heat in cars, too, because it seems men and women simply can’t agree on what temperature to set. A new study from Kwik Fit has revealed that 52% of couples whose cars have air conditioning argue over what temperature to set it at, and it’s usually men who want it cooler than their female companions. And as many as 250,000 drivers across the country say their air-con preferences are so different to their partner’s that they simply have to keep the system turned off to avoid bust-ups.