Gm Oem Tubing 12548430 New 16' Length For Hydraulic Brakes And Other Uses on 2040-parts.com
Bonham, Texas, United States
Brake Lines for Sale
- Russell 640481 straight brake adapter fitting(US $18.75)
- Rampage 960436 soft top(US $52.53)
- Genuine ford rear brake line. 6c2z-2a442-ca.(US $36.50)
- Ssbc performance brakes a0764 2 lb. residual pressure valve(US $31.11)
- Ssbc performance brakes a0765 10 lb. residual pressure valve(US $34.85)
- -4 an 36" stainless steel braided brake line assembled straight 90*(US $17.99)
Former Volvo design boss Steve Mattin to join Russia's Lada
Wed, 21 Sep 2011Former Volvo Cars design chief Steve Mattin will head design at the Russian brand Lada. Mattin will start at the Russian automaker on Oct. 1, Lada's owner AvtoVAZ told Automotive News Europe in an email.
More power and track bias for ultimate Megane RS
Thu, 05 Oct 2006By Phil McNamara Motor Industry 05 October 2006 01:07 Renaultsport is unleashing its most honed Megane yet – the catchily named 230 F1 Team R26. The £19,750 hot hatch is based on the track-focused 225 Cup edition, but with power bumped to 230bhp, tauter suspension and a limited slip differential to boost traction. A rasping sports exhaust and ECU tweaks boost the 2.0-litre turbo engine’s power from 225 to 230bhp.
Watch the sad, final moments of a crusher-bound heap
Mon, 07 Apr 2014Automotive wrecking yards are good places to reflect on the real-world values of heavily depreciated vehicles versus global current scrap-metal prices, and to see which cars have suddenly had the fix-it-versus-total-it line moved by insurance companies (the early-21st-century Subaru Legacy Outback, for example, appeared in large numbers in high-turnover wrecking yards just during the last year, as fairly minor collision damage on these cars is no longer worth fixing). You'll see the things that a car's last owner does in a desperate attempt to sell (or at least live with) an increasingly decrepit heap (as we learned in "Repo Man," you really will find a Little Tree in every car). During a recent trip to a San Jose, Calif., yard, I encountered this sad yet strangely compelling scene.