99-02 Ford Expedition Rds Radio Cassette Player Yl3f-18c870-aa Oem * on 2040-parts.com
Williamson, Georgia, US
Audio In-Dash Units for Sale
- Kenwood excelon kdc-x395 usb/aux/sat (US $20.00)
- 2000-2002 honda accord radio(US $30.00)
- 99-02 ford f150 expedition rds radio cassette yl1f-18c870-ja factory *(US $33.25)
- 98-02 isuzu rodeo trooper radio cassette player 8972189292 *(US $26.25)
- Nissan sentra pn-2591m 00-06 in-dash radio cd player cy08b(US $90.00)
- 00-02 lincoln navigator rds dsp alpine radio cassette yl7f-18c870-ja oem *(US $25.00)
Honda Skydeck Concept at Tokyo
Wed, 30 Sep 2009The Honda Skydeck Concept will be shown at the Tokyo Motor Show We had Honda’s CR-Z Concept earlier, and now we gate Honda’s take on the new Ford C-Max – the Honda Skydeck Concept. But again, it’s more than a concept. This is Honda’s planned replacement for the FR-V – just bigger and a lot more contemporary.
One-off Porsche 911 Carrera 4S celebrates 5 million Facebook fans
Mon, 05 Aug 2013Porsche has built a special 911 Carrera 4S (pictured) to celebrate 5 million Facebook Fans Car makers do like to get their Facebook fans to ‘design’ a car; it’s a good way of drawing fans in to the brand and give them an idea of what floats buyers’ boats. Some are not all that impressive, but the 911 Carrera 4S Porsche has built in celebration of getting 5 million fans on Facebook – designed with input from those fans – is actually quite understated. It comes in a quite fetching shade of Aqua Blue Metallic, a set of white 20″ alloys (a bit tacky), sports suspension and exhaust, an Aerokit with big back spoiler, personalised sill plates, brushed aluminium trim inside and a plaque telling the world this is a Porsche designed by 5 million Facebook fans.
Exotics get sideways at Monticello's 'Drift With the Supercars'
Mon, 25 Oct 2010Monticello Motor Club president Ari Straus and his PR guy, Roger Garbow, were brainstorming in early October and came up with what initially sounded like a crazy idea: Bring a bunch of supercars to the track for a day of drifting. "Beer was involved," says Garbow, in an attempt to rationalize the insanity of the concept. The next day, the two decided it was still a crazy idea.