Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Jeep Go Topless Camo Decal on 2040-parts.com

US $4.99
Location:

Denton, North Carolina, US

Denton, North Carolina, US
Returns Accepted:ReturnsNotAccepted Country of Manufacture:United States

Camo GO TOPLESS vinyl decal, unit is 3.5"x8.75".  This decal is made to fit the outside of vehicle windows and printed with UV and water resistant inks.  Vinyl decals can be applied to any finished surface excluding unfinished wood or porous surfaces.  I am a new return seller on ebay and will be listing a lot of vinyl decals in the future so please check back or feel free to email me with special request!  All of my items are shipped nightly and six days a week, they are sent USPS parcel post for the cheapest shipping rates possible.  Thanks for looking!

Graphics Decals for Sale

Audi Quattro return planned for Frankfurt motor show

Fri, 14 Jun 2013

Audi is planning to return the Quattro to its lineup some 30 years after the original model first appeared, Autoweek sources say. September's Frankfurt motor show is shaping up as the likely backdrop for the reveal; the car looks like it could be one of the German automaker's most exciting cars in quite some time. Word is sales will start in 2014.

Mini Crossover at the Paris motor show 2008

Thu, 02 Oct 2008

By Ben Barry Motor Shows 02 October 2008 15:46 We’ve already seen it in the November 2008 issue of CAR, but Paris marked the motor show debut of the Mini Crossover Concept – a pumped-up four-wheel drive Mini that goes on sale in 2009. As journalists crammed together in what looked like a trendy nightclub, a video of two Chemical Brother-style hipsters driving the Crossover through a warehouse played behind the covered over concept before – ta-da! – some heavily tattooed type swung down from the rafters to remove the covers and reveal the actual pair inside the actual car.

AA celebrates 40 years of 'get you home'

Mon, 21 Oct 2013

THIS MONTH the Automobile Association is celebrating the 40th anniversary of its Recovery service - originally called AA Relay - that promised to get you home or to your destination. Back in 1973 there were very limited options if your broken-down car could not be fixed at the side of the road. The AA patrol could only tow you to your local garage to have it fixed or you would have to carry on your journey without the car.