Gas Cap Thunderbird 55-60 ~ 67-70 Falcon Wgn 66-69 New on 2040-parts.com
nw ga, US
Other for Sale
- Wix 24921 stanadyne fuel manager hand primer each(US $45.92)
- Quick fuel carburetor idle feed restrictor 7-7(US $2.90)
- Econoaid throttle body booster aluminum polished .032" thickness jeep 2.5l each(US $39.94)
- (2) k&n flame arrestor 2-3/4"flange marine 4"h 59-2040(US $71.94)
- Airaid throttle body spacer billet aluminum red 1" cadillac chevy gmc pontiac ea(US $119.90)
- Edelbrock fuel psi regulator aluminum 5-10 psi for carbureted applications ea(US $144.97)
Range Rover Evoque by Project Kahn Arrives – minus Cosworth tweaks
Tue, 03 Jan 2012Range Rover Evoque by Project Kahn Project Kahn has revealed their take on the Range Rover Evoque, with a cosmetic treatment but no Cosworth power boost. Over a year ago – before the Range Rover Evoque started to hit the roads – Bradford car customiser Project Kahn revealed their take on the Evoque complete with unspecified Cosworth power upgrades. But that idea seems not to have borne fruit, and instead we get an Evoque from Kahn with a purely cosmetic take on Land Rover’s new baby.
What are your favourite driving roads?
Fri, 22 Aug 2008By Tim Pollard Motoring Issues 22 August 2008 16:42 We're on the hunt for the world's best driving roads. Click on the link below to tell us about your favourite routes of all time – you can debate your choices in our forum. And don't forget to come back to CAR Online next week when we launch our new adventure section on the website.
Ford Ka (2009): more photos and details
Mon, 08 Sep 2008By Tim Pollard First Official Pictures 08 September 2008 17:40 Ford has issued more details and photographs of its Ka city car, the Blue Oval's twin of the cutesy Fiat 500. The new Ka will – for the first time – be available as a diesel in the shape of the 74bhp 1.3-litre TDCI model, which can muster a very sensible 67.2mpg on the combined cycle. But don't forget that few 'mini buyers pick diesel in the UK; an oil-burning city car's price premium appears larger and economy gains smaller when compared with bigger cars, making diesel babies like hens' teeth.