Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Celica 1971, 72,73,74,75 New Slave Cylinder With Hydraulic Clutch Line Complete! on 2040-parts.com

US $9.76
Location:

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, US

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, US
Returns Accepted:ReturnsNotAccepted Part Brand:Toyota Warranty:No Country of Manufacture:Japan

You are bidding on a complete hydraulic clutch line assembly with clutch slave cylinder.

The metal line and the rubber line are used. Comes with a used clutch slave cylinder that I have not tested to work.
However as you can see in the pictures. I have thrown in a brand-new clutch slave cylinder as a package of parts.

This part was removed from a 1971 Celica (RA21). And will fit Toyota Celica 1971 to 1975. This is an essential part if you are looking to change over from an automatic transmission to a manual transmission of these years.



All questions must be asked before you bid and not after the closing. All sales final.


ToyheadAuto.com

We Ship Worldwide!

Outside US winning bidder must pay additional shipping costs.

Good luck bidding!

Transmission & Drivetrain for Sale

What's New - October 2005

Sat, 01 Oct 2005

Mercedes-Benz has released pictures of their F600 Hygenius, designed in their advanced studio in Yokohama. It is the latest in a series of research vehicles by DaimlerChrysler that encase their latest technologies: appropriately, the fuel cell is the focus this time. The car is proportionally similar to the B-Class, with gawky graphics blending windows with headlamp lenses.

The thinking man’s M3: Alpina D3 Bi-Turbo is world’s fastest diesel production car

Thu, 10 Oct 2013

German tuning firm Alpina has been tweaking BMWs since it started back in 1965 – in fact, it helped BMW develop the legendary 3.0 CSL, so it seems it knows its onions. However, its latest effort is something a little different. Not quite a conventional performance car, the 2013 Alpina D3 Bi-Turbo is actually the world’s fastest diesel production car, according to the firm.

Aston Martin eyes Lagonda comeback

Tue, 15 Oct 2013

The last time we saw an Aston Martin Lagonda on the street, it looked like its sharp angles could deflect not only police radar and laser, but give pedestrians a paper cut if they weren't careful. And the last time we saw a Lagonda concept -- at the 2009 Geneva motor show -- it looked like, well, like what you see above. We're still not sure what we see above, and leading scientists aren't sure, either.