Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

2010 Camaro Ss Ignition Switch Lock Cylinder And Key on 2040-parts.com

US $100.00
Location:

Queen Creek, Arizona, US

Queen Creek, Arizona, US
:

2010 Camaro SS with 6 speedM/T. only 12K miles. had very light hit with no air bag deployment I am parting this car out! please see all my other listings. If I don't have the Camaro part listed please fill free to ask me if I have it.

This listing is for the ignition switch lock cylinder and key

 

I only ship to the lower 48 states

Record expected for Auto Union sale

Wed, 07 Feb 2007

By James Mullan Motor Industry 07 February 2007 09:21 A rare 1939 Auto Union Type D grand prix car is tipped to tear up the record books this month when it goes under the hammer – for an estimated price of up to £7.8 million. Auto Union developed the Type D racing car with a mid-mounted 3.0-litre 12-cylinder engine; in 1939, it was modified with the addition of a twin supercharger, increasing power 420bhp to 460bhp – enough for a top speed of 205mph. This particular car won the French and Yugoslavian Grand Prix in 1939, but at the end of the Second World War it was transported from East Germany to the former Soviet Union by Russian occupation forces as spoils of war.

Maserati GranTurismo: Excitement is automatic

Fri, 12 Jun 2009

Having two personalities is not normally desirable, but for the Maserati GranTurismo S Automatic, it works. Grand-touring cars, by their nature, lead double lives, packing in enough performance to satisfy demanding drivers while being practical enough for every day. This latest iteration of the GranTurismo is yet another fine example from Modena.

Future Audis may time traffic lights for you

Tue, 11 Mar 2014

Here's a trick efficiency-chasing hypermilers have been using for years: spotting the cycles of stoplights from 100 to 200 yards out and letting the car coast up to the light just before it turns green, then carrying on without ever letting the car come to a complete stop. These hypermilers, along with professional truck drivers, do this because they know that accelerating from a standstill burns the greatest amount of fuel, and because letting a car coast up to the light with the automatic transmission downshifting by itself is easier on the transmission than stomping on the brakes right beneath the stoplight. Oh, and it's easier on the brake pads as well.