Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Alfa Romeo Giulia Super E' Ti Quarter Pillar Badge Set Oe Nos on 2040-parts.com

Location:

Fresno, California, United States

Fresno, California, United States
Condition:New Country/Region of Manufacture:Italy

Up for bid.................Alfa Romeo Giulia Super/Ti Quarter Pillar Badges. These badges are OE, NOS. 


Note: price listed is for a pair (2)

[31-pair sold]

All parts are 100% guaranteed. All parts are OE and NOS unless noted. U.S. freight charge for all 50 state delivery.

A plethora of other OE, NOS Alfa Romeo parts on-hand.

Koenigsegg Hundra: One-off Koenigsegg Agera S – first details & pictures

Fri, 01 Mar 2013

The 100th Koenigsegg – the Koenigsegg Hundra, based on the Agera S – is heading for a debut at the 2013 Geneva Motor Show. The Koenigsegg Hundra (hundra means 100th in Swedish) is a right hand drive Agera S in clear carbon with 24 carat gold leaf inlays – Artisan applied, of course – creating what Koenigsegg are calling “…an intriguing mix of traditional and hi-tech craftsmanship”. We’re assuming that the Koenigsegg Hundra is heading for Hong Kong because Koenigsegg has based it on the Agera S – which can produce the 1030 horses of the Agera R but without needing to use biofuel – and it’s right hand drive.

Jaguar Land Rover U-turn: all three UK plants saved

Fri, 15 Oct 2010

Jaguar Land Rover today surprised us all by announcing that it wouldn't be closing any of its three UK plants. CEO of Tata Motors Carl-Peter Forster had told CAR as recently as the Paris motor show a few weeks ago that one plant would shut. Instead, today the unions and Jaguar Land Rover hailed a landmark deal to save jobs and all three plants at Castle Bromwich, Solihull and Halewood.

Skoda Fabia Monte Carlo Tech Edition

Fri, 05 Apr 2013

The Skoda Fabia Monte Carlo Tech Edition is a limited edition of the already limited edition Fabia Monte Carlo, with added equipment. We all understand that producing limited edition cars adds a bit of showroom gloss, with car makers adding something extra – and often unique to the model, to create a ‘Limited Edition’ with extra equipment to boost sales. But is it stretching things a bit far when a car maker takes an already ‘Limited’ edition car and bolts more goodies on to it to create a ‘new’ limited edition?