2 Original 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 Corvette Tail Light Gaskets Used on 2040-parts.com
Durango, Colorado, US
Here is a nice pair of used taillight gaskets for a 1961 through 1967 Corvette. These came from a 1966 427 Roadster, that got new taillights. You can see the imprint of the housing in them.
Tail Lights for Sale
- 1973-77 oldsmobile cutlass 442 tail light wiring harness with factory trailer (US $45.00)
- 69 barracuda right tail light(US $25.00)
- 1968 plymouth road runner,satellite lh tail light bezel, very nice...(US $165.00)
- Nos 1963 dodge station wagon lens tail light 2421841(US $29.99)
- Nos 58 1958 59 1959 rambler tail light lens lamp lenses nors pr exc ambassador(US $50.00)
- 1973 alfa romeo license plate lights(US $46.00)
Gordon Murray's electric city car gets green light
Thu, 05 Nov 2009The UK Government tonight announced a major investment in Gordon Murray's radical new city car project. A £9 million grant will fund development of the T27, an electric city car successor to the original T25 being designed in the UK by the maverick engineer behind the McLaren F1 and numerous racing cars. The money will be spent designing and producing four prototypes over a 16-month period, with the eventual aim of putting an electric car with sustainable manufacturing processes into full production here in the UK. The T27 will be the follow-up to the petrol-powered T25, a small city car designed by jointly by Gordon Murray Design and Zytek Automotive technology.
Maserati Levante SUV won't be imported from Detroit after all
Thu, 05 Sep 2013For years, we've been hearing that the upcoming Maserati Levante SUV -- which debuted as the Maserati Kubang -- would be built at Chrysler's Jefferson North Assembly Plant in Detroit. The prospect of a high-dollar luxury crossover coming out of the gritty Motor City was intriguing, but the scheme made a certain sense -- the Levante is built on the same platform as the Jeep Grand Cherokee. Unfortunately, it's not gonna happen.
Them's the Breaks: Mercedes concept name razes I browse
Wed, 21 Apr 2010Yes, yes, we know. The Mercedes-Benz use of the term “Shooting Break” as the name for its latest concept vehicle is, well, it's just so wrong. The traditional, and most people would say correct, spelling is “shooting brake.” As AW's copy chief, I take this sort of thing very much to heart and felt moved to respond to the yowling of readers on our Web site.