2 Nos 1955 1956 Buick Front Wheel Bearing Seal & Retainer # 1322703 on 2040-parts.com
Wisner, Nebraska, United States
2 N.O.S. front wheel bearing seals. Group # 6.326 part # 1322703. Both still in original sealed GM parts packages. Fits --- 1955 19556 Buick cars |
Wheel Hubs & Bearings for Sale
- Mercedes 240d 300d 300cd 300td 280e 280ce 280s 560 380 front outer wheel bearing(US $10.00)
- 2 rear wheel bearings 1973 1974 chrysler with 8 3/4 inch ring gear pair 73 74(US $39.99)
- 1980`s ford big truck .wheelgrease seal(2) eotz-1190-f(US $19.99)
- Chevy inner wheel grease seal, front, for tapered roller bearing hub(US $4.99)
- 2 model t ford rear hubs & drums for 1926 1927 wire wheels(US $200.00)
- Corvette hubcaps 1953-1973(US $50.00)
Ford kills Mercury – boosts Lincoln
Thu, 03 Jun 2010The Linclon Concept C - Lincoln's first C-Segment car? In what is probably the least surpring move by Ford the Mercury moniker has been consigned to the history books as Ford continues to rebuild not just its balance book but its brand. Having finally divested itself of its troublesome posh-badge crew of Jaguar, Land Rover, Aston Martin and Volvo, the only surprise is that the Mecury brand lasted this long.
Goodwood Festival of Speed 2009 daily bulletins
Mon, 06 Jul 2009By Tim Pollard, Ben Pulman and Sarah-Jayne Harrison (good photos by James Mann, others DIY by writers) Motor Shows 06 July 2009 10:00 Welcome to CAR's coverage of the 2009 Goodwood Festival of Speed. We'll be posting daily bulletins with news, photos, galleries, blogs and reviews from the Festival of Speed – live from Lord March's front drive. NB start at the bottom and work your way up!
Fuel-tank probe rekindles old issue
Mon, 06 Sep 2010The placement of fuel tanks on passenger vehicles has changed over the past three decades, and for good reason. Automakers gradually have repositioned the tank to an area in front of the rear axle, generally below the rear passenger seat. Statistically speaking, the tank in that location is less vulnerable in a high-speed, rear-end crash than in the previous location--between the rear bumper and axle.