ORIGINAL VINTAGE GM CLUTCH BALL STUD FOR LINKAGE #2 NEW OLD STOCK GREAT IF YOURS IS WORN
Other for Sale
- Gmc chevy clutch ball stud(US $10.00)
- Gmc chevy clutch ball stud(US $10.00)
- Gmc chevy clutch ball stud(US $10.00)
- Gmc chevy clutch ball stud(US $10.00)
- Gmc chevy clutch ball stud(US $10.00)
- Corvette 1969l - 72 wiper door actuator / vacuum tank assy, oem(US $58.00)
Jaguar Land Rover: LIVE reveal from Geneva
Fri, 25 Feb 2011Jaguar Land Rover Press Conference LIVE from Geneva 2011 Just in case you’ve been lurking in an cave for the last few weeks, we’ll remind you that the 2011 Geneva Motor Show is but days away. And that means lots of car news, as you may already have realised. Which also means that, although we’ve already managed to bring reports of far more than the car makers would really like, we get a live reveal of new cars – always a bit of a buzz.
New Range Rover is Car Dealer’s Car of the Year
Thu, 13 Jun 2013The new Range Rover (pictured) get Car Dealer Magazine’s Car of the Year Award The new Range Rover may have started its trophy cabinet with an award for the best 4×4 from the Sunday Times – even though they’d never driven it – but the Car of the Year Award from Car Dealer Magazine is a much more credible one. It’s more credible because it’s voted on by car dealers across the UK – from a wide range of franchises – and gives credibility not just to the new Range Rover but to Land Rover’s support of dealers too. Car Dealer Magazine say the new Range Rover was the clear winner by a mile, with dealers commenting the latest version of the Range Rover is a gargantuan step on from the old model – which itself was already very good – and that it ‘Cannot fail to impress’.
1961 Ford Gyron concept scale model sells for $40,000
Wed, 19 Dec 2012A scale model of the 1961 Ford Gyron concept has sold at auction for $40,000, around four times its estimate. The space-age concept car – designed by Alex Tremulis, McKinley Thompson, Syd Mead, Bill Dayton, John Najjar, and Elwood Engel – debuted in 1961 at the New York International Auto Show and featured two wheels mounted along the car's centerline, usung a gyroscope for stability. The full-size model – which relied on stabilizing wheels instead of a gyroscope – also predicted the development of satellite navigation systems, car phones and infrared sensing.