2002 Oldsmobile Alero Outer Tail Light Lamp Left on 2040-parts.com
Garretson, South Dakota, US
Tail Lights for Sale
- 1998 chevy suburban 1500 tail lamp light left(US $45.00)
- 2001 dodge 1500 pickup tail lamp light right(US $40.00)
- 2007 chevy impala tail lamp light left(US $75.00)
- 1998 oldsmobile eighty eight tail lamp light right(US $75.00)
- 2005 ford focus tail lamp light left(US $75.00)
- 1999 ford windstar tail lamp light left(US $55.00)
Ford FF1 road-legal single-seater at 2013 Goodwood FoS. Heading for production?
Sat, 23 Mar 2013The Ford FF1 – a single-seat, road-legal track car powered by Ford’ 1.0 litre EcoBoost engine – will get a public debut at the 2013 Goodwood Festival of Speed. Ford built the FF1 as a showcase for the abilities of its little 1.0 litre, 3-cylinder EcoBoost engine, and it’s more than proved the point that modern 3-cylinder engines with small displacements and a bit of forced induction can be very appealing. In standard trim the FF1 produces 123 horses, but suitably tweaked to deliver a more fulsome 202 horses the FF1 took on the Nurburgring and managed to turn in a time of just 7:22 – quicker than a Zonda F, Enzo Ferrari, Nissan GT-R and 911 GT2 RS.
Project Car Hell, Straight Eight, Two Doors Edition: '47 Buick or '53 Packard?
Fri, 25 Apr 2014Welcome back to another session in the Hell Garage, where you choose between a pair of projects that match coolness with torment. We've been through air-cooled German cars, cheap Italian cars and incomprehensible French cars in recent weeks, and now we're going to winch a couple of big American two-doors with straight-eight power out of the Lake of Fire. Before the V8 reigned supreme in luxury-car land, cars with long hoods and smooth-running inline-eight engines showed that you had made it, and we've found a pair of such cars that should be gorgeous when restored…after about a decade of work.
Concept Car of the Week: Citroën Camargue (Bertone) 1972
Fri, 28 Mar 2014Coachbuilder Bertone presented the Camargue at the 1972 Geneva Motor Show as a 2+2 coupe alternative to the quirky Citroën GS hatchback. Named after the coastal region in the south of France, the Camargue was aimed to appeal to a young trend-conscious target audience. Penned by Marcello Gandini, the silhouette remained undoubtedly Citroën with a long overhang at the front, short at the rear and a long, sloping roofline.