Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

56 Ford Thunderbird Sun Visor Bracket & Rod, Left, Chrome on 2040-parts.com

US $19.00
Location:

Morganton, North Carolina, United States

Morganton, North Carolina, United States
Condition:New other (see details) Brand:Ford Placement on Vehicle:Left Other Part Number:B6S-4004145-A BAA-4004123-A Warranty:No

You are looking an NOS 56 Ford Thunderbird Left Sunvisor Bracket and Rod. This was unsealed part in a box with other New parts. The part No, on the bracker is BAA-4004123-A, the package is B6S-4004145-A so this one has me stumped. (( Look at the photos very well! )) Search photos I did show this is a 56 T-Bird peice and in great shape. If you need more info, feel free to ask.

Thanks For Looking

Toyota, Lexus cars recalled to fix brake leak

Thu, 21 Oct 2010

Toyota is recalling more than 1.5 million cars around the globe for brake and fuel-pump problems. This now brings Toyota's recall tally to more than 14 million vehicles around the world in the last year, many for unintended-acceleration issues. So what does this mean for you?

Audi R5, Porsche 550, VW Bluesport 'on hold'

Tue, 17 Jan 2012

Numerous indications are pointing to the exciting mid-engined VW, Porsche and Audi sports cars being on ice. The group had been collaborating to develop the VW Bluesport, Porsche 550 and Audi R5 - some observers had hailed the new roadsters as the Elise from Germany. Porsche doubts over the 550 But at the weekend Porsche CEO Matthias Muller told German business rag Wirtschaftswoche that he was worried a cheaper Porsche may dilute the brand's image.

Government CO2 cock-up

Sun, 03 Jun 2007

By Richard Yarrow Motoring Issues 03 June 2007 02:32 Britain’s new eco-motoring scheme postponed Plans to help Britain’s drivers choose the greenest car for their budget have been thrown into chaos, CAR Online can reveal. The launch of a new Government website for motorists – called www.actonco2.co.uk – has been cancelled just 16 hours before it was to go live. Amazingly, the Department for Transport (DfT) has admitted the eleventh hour delay was because it realised the CO2 data to published wasn’t accurate.