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Ferrari Cavallino Magazine Collection #20 -100 250 275 330 365 512 246 Dino 355 on 2040-parts.com

US $1,350.00
Location:

Dewittville, New York, United States

Dewittville, New York, United States

Cavallino Magazine Collection, Issues 20 through 100

All issues are in very good to new condition and have been stored in a non-smoker's home.

Here's an opportunity to start or complete your collection of Cavallino magazine at a lower cost, and pick up the more expensive 19 early issues as they become available. (Note: Photo of issue # 100 is not shown.)

Issues 101 through 200 available to complete the collection.

FREE shipping by FedEx Ground to a US address.

International shipping by FedEx at exact cost. (Approximately $200.00 for single box.)

Thanks for looking. 

Finalists announced in exterior phase of CDN-GM Interactive Design competition

Thu, 24 Nov 2011

The exterior phase of the CDN-GM Interactive Design competition closed on the November 7th, with over 150 entries from design students based in the USA and Canada, making it our most popular interactive competition phase so far. After the press days of the recent LA Auto Show, judges and mentors from GM, along with our competition partners Dassault Systèmes, Faurecia and SRG Global, gathered at GM's North Hollywood advanced design studio to pick the finalists. Those chosen will be invited to attend the 2012 NAIAS in Detroit, along with finalists from the interiors phase, and on the second press day, interiors and exterior winners will be announced for each brand.

One Lap of the Web: Barn-find Packards, a vintage Skyline racer and ultra-rare Ford Torino Talledegas

Mon, 28 Oct 2013

-- Who doesn't love a good barn find from time to time? Here's a 1929 Packard Model 633 Runabout stashed in a shed in the Adirondacks for half a century that, in true Cinderella fashion, went on to win best in show after a bit of dusting off. Heartwarming.

CAFE standards set to rise to 54.5 mpg for 2025

Fri, 29 Jul 2011

President Barack Obama on Friday revealed ambitious plans to raise the corporate average fuel economy standard for cars and light trucks to 54.5 mpg by the 2025 model year, a landmark move that will dramatically remake carmakers' product portfolios and consumers' buying habits. Unlike the first CAFE standards passed by Congress in 1975, the Detroit automakers now publicly support the high requirements and have begun retooling their fleets to adapt the changes. “[This] represents the single most important step we've ever taken as a nation to reduce our dependence on foreign oil,” Obama said in a morning press conference.