1979l-1982 Corvette Power Antenna Without Cb on 2040-parts.com
Sawyer, Michigan, United States
Antennas for Sale
- All sales 6211 antenna adapter(US $16.15)
- All sales 8209f stubbie universal antenna(US $36.06)
- Silver car shark fin style roof mount fm/am radio antenna aeria for honda accord
- Universal painted bmw style shark fin antenna-silver-a(US $10.99)
- Car red shark fin roof top mount decor dummy antenna aerial for bmw m3 m4 m5 fm
- New genuine mercedes w124 260e 300e 300d radio antenna seal grommet lower(US $9.80)
A look at future Nissan products
Wed, 29 Aug 2012The push for fuel economy leadership will heavily influence the look and performance of Nissan's new products for the next three years. The effort will be focused on three primary areas: cutting vehicle weight, improving aerodynamics and reducing friction in the engine and transmission. Those three priorities already can be seen in the 2013 Altima, which went on sale in June with 20 percent better fuel economy than the outgoing model.
Essex is home to a Brand New E-Type Jaguar
Mon, 08 Dec 2008Ray Parrott, an Essex haulier and E-Type fanatic, has created the last ever authentic E-Type Jaguar from a collection of spare parts that has been gathering dust in a garage since 1974, when the last E-Type rolled off the production line at Browns Lane. Ray was contacted by Mike Wilkinson of M & C Wilkinson Spares, a classic Jag parts specialist in Yorkshire, who had dealt with Ray on many occasions for parts for the E-Types he already owned, to tell him that he had been able to secure this huge range of parts, all brand new and unused, from the guy who had bought them from Jaguar in the ’70s And so was hatched a plan. The New E-Type Jaguar belonging to Ray Parrot Between them they realised that there were at least 95% of the parts needed to build an E-Type from scratch, including the bodyshell, brand new V12 engine, gearbox and rear axle and even an unopened canvas top for the Roadster.
One Lap of the Web: Motel kitsch, Bentley dragsters and rusting Porsches
Fri, 23 May 2014-- The roach motel lives on in these postcards from Petrolicious. The Googie signs and modernist architecture jump from the Howard Johnsons and Travelodges of the 1950s, when buildings were built in color. For a precious few decades in the tapestry of American interstate travel, before they became the refuge of schlocky horror movies, the motor hotel was the true King of the Road.