Clymer Mercury/mariner 75 - 250 Hp Outboards, 1998-2009 -b727 on 2040-parts.com
Phoenix, Arizona, United States
Service Tools for Sale
- Clymer evinrude/johnson 5-70 hp four-stroke outboards (1995-2001) -b753(US $37.36)
- Clymer polaris jet ski & water vehicles (1996-1998) -w820(US $37.36)
- Klein tools tradesman pro organizer hard case - medium(US $32.09)
- Clymer evinrude/johnson 2 stroke 85-300 hp ob 1995-2006 -b737-2(US $37.36)
- Clymer mariner 2-220 hp outboards (including electric motors) (1976-1989) -b714(US $37.36)
- Clymer mercruiser stern drive alpha 1 bravo 1 & 2 1986-1994 -b742(US $37.36)
The Mini Moke makes its comeback
Mon, 14 Oct 2013It wouldn't be entirely fair to put the Mini Moke into the 'so bad it's good' category, but the fact remains, the Moke wasn't that great. And yet, despite its tepid performance, questionable off-road ability and tendency to rust, it was a runaway success. Let's face it, the Mini Moke remains one of the coolest cars ever created.
Lamborghini by Giugiaro uncovered
Tue, 19 Jul 2011At a recent visit to Giugiaro, this 50 year old unnamed Lamborghini, never before seen, suddenly appeared like an undiscovered Shakespeare manuscript, discreetly displayed in a library with no-one paying attention. Parked under some Greek temple-like stairs at the Giugiaro Design headquarters, the car sat on its period Borranis, painted in a yellow hue unseen this side of Ducati. No details, no background, but the story is simple: Fabrizio Giugiaro found some of his father's old sketches from the Bertone era (1960-1965).
Peugeot 308 (2007): first official pictures
Mon, 02 Jul 2007By Ben Whitworth First Official Pictures 02 July 2007 01:53 This can only be a Peugeot… You eagled eyed car spotter, you… Yes, it’s the new 308 that arrives here in October after first making its public debut at the Frankfurt motor show in September. Known internally at T7, it’s taken four years and 4000 people to develop, and in a bid to compact its reliability record, each car will undergo an 1800-point quality check on the production line. Not really.