Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Adapter, R134a (1/2 Fm Acme) X R12 (1/4"male Flare) on 2040-parts.com

US $3.49
Location:

Hartford, Wisconsin, United States

Hartford, Wisconsin, United States


Building Trust in Transactions (tm)
Building Trust in Transactions (tm)
SquareTrade © AP6.0

R134a Adapter

R134a to R12 Adapter

1/2" ACME (R134a)  FEMALE   to    1/4"Male Flare (R12)

Light-Weight and comes with the internal O-Ring.

Check out my other items!

Be sure to add me to your favorites list!

From collectibles to electronics, buy and sell all kinds of items on eBay Stores

 

Top Gear: Skoda Yeti, Ariel Atom V8, Porsche 911 & John Bishop tonight

Sun, 23 Jan 2011

Top Gear Skoda Yeti Helipad We thought that Top Gear had kicked in to the start of a new series – Series 16 AB (that’s ‘After Boring’ Top Gear) – when we had the Three Wise Men Christmas Special and the preceding Top Gear East Coast USA Road Trip. But it was a trick; nothing more than an hors d’œuvre for the new series. But Top Gear series 16 does start tonight – 8pm BBC2 (GMT).

Jaguar to build more R-S and R-S GT models

Tue, 07 May 2013

Not only that, but Jaguar has also replaced the XJ Supersport with a more focused XJR that offers proper dynamics and a more clearly defined appeal than the Supercpsort. All opf which points to Jaguar’s plans to offer cars in their range that have true performance credentials to take on the might of BMW’s M Division and Mercedes AMG. That has been made even clearer by Jaguar’s Wayne Burgess who has told Edmunds that Jaguar will be pushing the envelope further and deeper across the Jaguar range with more R-S models in the planning as well as More R-S GT models too.

One Lap of the Web: Motel kitsch, Bentley dragsters and rusting Porsches

Fri, 23 May 2014

-- The roach motel lives on in these postcards from Petrolicious. The Googie signs and modernist architecture jump from the Howard Johnsons and Travelodges of the 1950s, when buildings were built in color. For a precious few decades in the tapestry of American interstate travel, before they became the refuge of schlocky horror movies, the motor hotel was the true King of the Road.