Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

230 250 292 Chevy Inline Six Cnc Billet Adjustable 1:30 Position Timing Pointer on 2040-parts.com

US $43.50
Location:

Dania, Florida, United States

Dania, Florida, United States
Condition:New Placement on Vehicle:Front Country/Region of Manufacture:United States Surface Finish:New CNC Machined

230 250 292 Chevy inline six CNC Billet adjustable timing pointer

Upper 1:30 position lower specify.

Works with stock steel cover and the billet machined covers.

Finally a show quality application specific indicator. 

We field tested them with the following dampers; Fisher, OEM, Pioneer, ATI, Fluid, and Innovators West

Note on feed back: As a buyer I always leave feed back when I receive an item, as a seller I give feed back when it’s been given.        

Please feel free to ask questions.            

           Mrhotrod6 Motorsports; where the highest of quality is our standard!

Neiman Marcus tucks a Ferrari FF in its Christmas Book

Tue, 18 Oct 2011

Neiman Marcus, purveyor of all things haute couture, has released its annual Christmas Book featuring amazing--and amazingly expensive--gifts for that special someone for the holidays. For the car fan on your list, consider Neiman's version of the 2012 Ferrari FF--for a mere $375,000. That's a bit more than the near $300,000 asking price for a standard Ferrari FF, but you would have one of only 10 examples of the Neiman Marcus Ferrari FF to be built.

Kia Sorento (2012) first official pictures

Mon, 18 Jun 2012

Kia has unveiled a new version of its popular Sorento SUV - and although the style is similar, the lightweight architecture is all-new. Subtle exterior modifications belie a heavily re-engineered chassis and powertrain package for the three-year-old model. What are the big changes on the new 2012 Kia Sorento?

The Leko – a new car from IKEA? – Not a chance!

Tue, 24 Mar 2009

A new site claims IKEA is about to launch a car - on the 1st April! [ad#ad-1] The latest silly site to go (semi) viral online this week purports to be teasing a new car from IKEA, that hell of  a flat-pack, windowless, clockless shopping experience where the only instructions you get for assembling your insane purchase are a set of pictures on a big sheet of paper, that seemingly have no resemblance to the contents of the package you’ve been stupefied in to buying. Now on the face of it this is perhaps plausible.