Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

1980-1981 Suzuki Motorcycle Gs1000 Glt Glx Microfiche Parts Catalog Gs 1000 on 2040-parts.com

US $4.95
Location:

Utica, Michigan, United States

Utica, Michigan, United States
Condition:Used

A Factory Original 1980-1981 Suzuki GS1000, 1980-GLT and 1981-GLX Motorcycle Parts List Catalog on Microfiche.  

This Microfiche Card is in VERY GOOD USABLE CONDITION, measuring 4" x 6" and to be used in conjunction with a Microfiche Card Reader.  If you don't have a reader, most local libraries do.  This Parts Catalog is the same one the dealer mechanics/technicians use. The Card in the picture is the Card/Manual you will receive. NO STOCK PHOTOS. Any questions, please ask.

 

Suzuki for Sale

Lincoln MKR concept

Tue, 02 Jan 2007

By Tim Pollard Motor Shows 02 January 2007 11:49 Lincoln MKR Concept: the lowdown Lincoln will slide the wraps off its answer to the Mercedes CLS at the Detroit Motor Show next week: this luxurious and wedgy MKR concept. It’s the work of ex-Volvo British designer Peter Horbury, who now heads Ford’s Amercian design division, and hints at how Lincolns will look in the years ahead: the Viking-hat grille is straddled by pencil-thin LED headlights, while the flanks of the car are notably uncluttered. Don’t expect to see the 21-inch wheels and ‘Lincoln star’ patterns in the tyre treads on production cars any time soon, though.

Use screenwash – or risk Legionnaires’ Disease

Mon, 14 Jun 2010

Adding Screenwash stops Legionella bacterium To be entirely truthful, the risk isn’t huge. There are probably less than 500 cases a year of Legionnaires’ Disease in the UK, but new research points to a likely cause for an unpleasant infection for which the source of infection often goes undiscovered. The Health Protection Agency has been checking out findings that professional drivers were the group mostly at risk – five times more likely to contract Legionnaires’ disease – and have been looking at why.

SS safe for Chevy under Reuss's watch

Thu, 19 Nov 2009

From 1960s Chevelles to modern Camaros, speedy Chevrolets have always been identified with two letters: SS. But does the tradition-laden performance designation have a future in the new General Motors, which is under pressure to cut costs, make money and meet stricter fuel-economy regulations? “Absolutely,” Mark Reuss, GM vice president of global engineering, told AutoWeek.