Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Gm, 2 Sets Of Brake Shoes For Rear Wheels Only, 61-64 Olds on 2040-parts.com

US $29.00
Location:

Hanover, Pennsylvania, United States

Hanover, Pennsylvania, United States
Condition:New Brand:GM Country/Region of Manufacture:United States Placement on Vehicle:Rear

Up for Auction is are two sets of brake shoes for the rear wheels, of a 61-64 Olds.   They may fit other GM cars.  They are new and in original packaging.  (Photos show all 4 sets of brake shoes for all four wheels - front and rear, You will receive 1 wrapped set for each wheel.)

I ACCEPT PAY PAL ONLY.

Payment is expected at the end of the Auction.  If payment is not made within 7 days, the item will be relisted and eBay will be notified that it is an Unpaid Item.

I do accept returns.  Please notify me immediately, if there is a problem, so that the problem can be resolved without any negative feedback.  I refund the total amount of the purchase, plus the original shipping, if the fault is mine.  Return shipping is the responsibility of the Buyer.

HAPPY BIDDING

2012 Jaguar XF Facelift Leak

Fri, 08 Apr 2011

One's the 2012 Jaguar XF Facelift. The other's the Jaguar C-XF Concept from 2007. We know – or at least we think we know – that the 2012 Jaguar XF is going to make its debut at the New York Motor Show this month.

NLV Quant – née Koenigsegg Quant – at Geneva

Thu, 25 Feb 2010

The Quant - back at Geneva as the NLV Quant Last week we ran a story on Koenigsegg taking somethig new to Geneva after we’d had a chat with them. But part of that story was on last year’s Koenigsegg Quant, a four-seat electric supercar we saw at Geneva 2009. At the time it was billed as a Koenigsegg Quant (although, as Koenigsegg pointed out to us, it was always a commission project) but now it’s set to return to Geneva 2010 as the NLV Quant.

Green fuel 'costly and harmful'

Fri, 07 Feb 2014

A NEW "GREEN" FUEL to be introduced in the UK to meet EU regulations could be costly and harmful, according to tests carried out by What Car? magazine. The E10 fuel, which contains 10% bio-ethanol, was less efficient than the current E5 (up to 5% bio-ethanol) blend across every engine type tested, What Car?