Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Ford Window Handle Fairlane Thunderbird Customline Mainline 51 52 53 54 55 56 on 2040-parts.com

US $18.95
Location:

Signal Hill, California, United States

Signal Hill, California, United States
Condition:New Manufacturer Part Number:B5A-7023342-A Warranty:Yes

Reproduction window handle

51-56 Ford-all models
55-56 Thunderbird

Includes escutcheon and mounting clip
  • All items fully guaranteed, in stock and ready to ship
  • Combined shipping on multiple item purchases
  • For multiple item purchases, please use shopping cart, then "request a total from buyer"
  • California residents pay 7 1/2 % sales tax
  • Please see my store listings for more Ford & Mercury parts and accessories

EU ban on petrol and diesel cars from city centres by 2050

Mon, 28 Mar 2011

Say goodbye to the Black Cab & London bus under EU plans In yet another case of ‘Why do we elect idiots to govern us?’, the EU is calling for a complete ban on all petrol and diesel powered cars from city centres by 2050. Why not by next year? The ‘Brussels Ban’ lays out a timescale for other ‘worthy’ objectives along the way.

Concept Car of the Week: BMW Z13 (1993)

Fri, 30 Nov 2012

Rear-mounted engine, three seats, central driving position, 830 kg. What might sound like the ingredients for a fantastic little sports car apply in fact to the exceptionally compact and exciting BMW Z13 concept presented in 1993 at the Geneva motor show. BMW engineers and designers developed a car that combined practicality, innovation, safety, economy and, more importantly, it looks like a lot of fun.

How will you get to work in the year 2030?

Wed, 08 Oct 2014

Imagine a future where New Jersey adopts mass public transit and on-demand jitneys; Boston becomes hyper-dense and walking becomes the primary means of transport; Atlanta disperses even further and relies on solar power, electric cars and Google connected technologies to manage mobility; and Los Angeles tries autonomous cars, but finds the transition difficult, and its gridlock even worse. These are the scenarios proposed in a new study by New York University's Rudin Center for Transport Policy and Management. The report, which proposes scenarios rather than making predictions about the future of transportation in the US, repeatedly points to connected car technologies, autonomous cars and logistics networks as driving forces in regional mobility solutions.