Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Fulton Deluxe Exterior Adjustable Sun Visor With Rare Lip Mount & Center W/s Mnt on 2040-parts.com

US $550.00
Location:

Des Moines, Iowa, US

Des Moines, Iowa, US
:

You are bidding on a Vintage Fulton Exterior Sun Visor, this has the rare lip mount. This could be used most and vintage on any car or truck Rat Rod or Hot Rod. The visor is overall very nice used. All mounting brackets are included. One tab is a little weak on side bracket(bends back and forth). This will not hurt mounting visor in any way(I would probably have a bead welded in channel of little bracket to reinforce). The visor is 53" wide, but can be adjusted up to 59" wide. The mounts are roof edge and center windshield post.

 The visor will be taken apart for shipping International shippers are welcome.

M6 cafe voted top of the pit stops

Fri, 20 Jun 2014

TEBAY SERVICES on the M6 is the most popular place for a pit stop in the UK, a survey has found. The family-run service station in the Lake District that sells home-grown and local produce in its farm shop and restaurant achieved the top score of 90% in a survey of Which? members.

Infiniti to tap Nissan UK’s fleet customers to grow sales

Fri, 07 Oct 2011

Infiniti to leverage Nissan Corporate Sales for growth in the UK We do have a habit of taking the Michael out of Infinit’s efforts to grow car sales in the UK. We’ve often wondered if they’re working on a strategy that goes counter to logic in the hope it pays dividends. For example, the obvious route for Infiniti was a hard push on private buyers of luxury cars and positioning themselves as the ‘Sporty’ alternative to that other Japanese luxury brand, Lexus.

Could Coffee Kick Start Your Car?

Tue, 17 Jun 2014

NEXT time you’re reaching for the coffee in a bid to kick start your day, in the future the popular beverage could also power your drive to work. In a new development, scientists have made biofuel from ground coffee produced in 20 different geographic regions - including caffeinated and decaffeinated forms. New research from the University of Bath suggests waste coffee grounds could be a "sustainable fuel source" for powering vehicles.