Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Ford 9 Inch Locker Mini Spool Posi 12 Spline Rear End Hot Rat Street Rod Gasser on 2040-parts.com

Location:

Kokomo, Indiana, United States

Kokomo, Indiana, United States
Condition:Used


 YOU ARE LOOKING AT A FORD 9 INCH LOCKER MINI SPOOL POSI 12 SPLINE REAR END  HOT RAT STREET ROD

THIS IS A LOT OF 2 FORD 9 INCH 12 SPLINE LOCKERS

BOTH LOCKERS ARE NEW

 LOOK AT PICS.

THANKS FOR LOOKING.

IF YOU WANT TO KNOW ANYTHING ELSE EMAIL ME.

Rear End for Sale

Range Rover (2011): first pictures, new V8

Thu, 17 Jun 2010

Land Rover might only have revised the Range Rover last summer, but there’s now a new version, complete with a bigger and better 4.4-litre TDV8, plus it's available as a limited-run Autobiography Black special edition to celebrate the car’s 40th birthday. For a start the engine has grown from 3.6 to 4.4-litres, but still retains the twin sequential turbochargers. That means 309bhp (up from 267bhp), while the torque figures climbs from 472lb ft to 516lb ft.

Chevrolet Corvette Stingray Convertible (2013) first official pictures

Tue, 05 Mar 2013

You wait ages for a new Corvette, and then six weeks after the new Stingray bows in at the 2013 Detroit atuo show, its soft-top sister is revealed at the Geneva motor show. The latest C7-generation Corvette drop-top uses the same mechanical package (big V8 up front, power sent to the rear wheels) as its fixed-head sister but adds an electrically-folding soft-top roof that you can lower remotely via pushing a button on the key fob. You can also drop the roof while on the move, at speed of up to 31mph.

The Super Bowl's most refreshingly honest car ad

Fri, 08 Feb 2013

In 2000's High Fidelity, hapless record-store owner Rob Gordon -- played memorably by John Cusack -- opines, “What really matters is what you like, not what you are like." In the year 2000, I was 24 years old and was working on a punk rock magazine, an environment not dissimilar from Gordon's Championship Vinyl. The line made a lot of sense to me; it was a quiet, back-of-the-head maxim that informed much of what my friends and I did and how we saw people. It's a shallow way of looking at things, but for those of us who came of age amid the us-vs.-them liberal identity politics of the '90s, awash as we were in Public Enemy's political consciousness, the post-AIDS gay-rights push and the loud-fast feminism of the riot grrrl movement, there was a good chance that if somebody liked the things you liked, they thought like you and they were good.