Other for Sale
- Mazda rx2 capella coupe rear side 1/4 quarter window regular guide pair sh(AU $250.00)
- Dorman 748-256 window regulator and motor assembly(US $148.95)
- Power window motor and regulator assembly dorman 741-848(US $79.99)
- Power window motor and regulator assembly-window assembly aci/maxair 88243(US $75.57)
- Power window motor and regulator assembly cardone fits 2001 honda odyssey(US $64.96)
- 2020 jeep wrangler windshield hinge rear(US $187.00)
Win the first new Jaguar XJ
Mon, 19 Oct 2009Jaguar are hoping to raise £1 million for the NSPCC in a ‘Win a new XJ’ competition But the work of actually getting the XJ in to customers’ hands in now the focus, and although we did an update on the new XJ’s progress recently there is nothing much more to report until cars hit the road in January. But if you want to have the privilege of owning the very first new XJ off the production line – a 3.0 litre diesel Portfolio worth £62k – you can enter a competition Jaguar are running to give away that very first car. Jaguar are hoping that sales of tickets for the competition – which cost £125 each – will raise £1 million for the NSPCC’s ‘Child’s Voice’ appeal, which is aiming to raise £50 million in total to fund its helplines.
MINI GP II on its way
Wed, 04 Apr 2012MINI GP II on its way (MINI GP pictured) MINI has revealed that they are planning a MINI GP II – the most powerful MINI ever – to be launched at Mini United 2012 in La Castellet in May. When the first BMW MINI was close to its sell by date, MINI churned out the most powerful MINI ever in the guise of the MINI GP. And now, with the second generation MINI nearing the end of its life, they’re about to pull the same trick with the MINI GP II.
Auctioneer Dean Kruse's money woes continue
Thu, 19 Nov 2009Auburn, Ind., auctioneer Dean Kruse has been ordered by a local court to pay more than $1.3 million to an Indiana bank, and a leasing company has asked a federal judge to repossess Kruse's 1985 Cessna jet, which had been insured at $3.5 million. These two recent events are on top of several months' worth of financial woes for one of the classic-car world's best-known auctioneers. AutoWeek reported in August that people from across the country were complaining that they had not been paid for cars sold at various Kruse International auctions.