Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

K&n Short-ram Intake System 69-8751tp With Aluminium Tube For Toyota Corolla on 2040-parts.com

US $
Location:

Condition:New Brand:K&N Filters Manufacturer Part Number:69-8751TP Performance Part:Yes Classic Car Part:No Reference OE/OEM Number:RU-4960 Warranty Period:No-Hassle Lifetime Limited Air Filter Colour:Red Air Filter Outlet Shape:Round Clamps Included:3 Clamp Style:Regular Clamp Material:Stainless Steel Air Filter Material:Cotton Gauze Air Filter Length:18.25 in (464 mm) Air Filter Width:14.5 in (368 mm) Finish:Polished Type:Short Ram Intake System Features:Washable, Reusable, Easy To Install

Cold Air Intake for Sale

Churchill’s Land Rover sells for £129,000

Mon, 22 Oct 2012

A Land Rover presented to Sir Winston Churchill on his 80th birthday has sold at auction for £129,000. Sir Winston Spencer Churchill, probably the greatest Prime Minister the UK has ever had, was 80 in 1954, prompting Rover to present the great man with a custom Land Rover so he could be chauffeured round his Chartwell Estate. The Series 1 Land Rover came complete with an extra wide passenger seat, big, padded centre armrest and leather grab handle and had the registration UKE 80 which may (or may not) have referred to Churchill’s age and ‘United Kingdom Empire.

Queen’s hat causes car problem in France

Mon, 02 Jun 2014

Renault | AP The French president has a problem: it turns out none of the Citroen cars currently at his disposal are large enough to accommodate the Queen’s customary hats. So for Her Majesty’s state visit on 6 June, in commemoration of the 70th anniversary of D-Day, president Francois Hollande has ordered an old Renault out of retirement to make sure the Queen has the necessary headroom. On Bing: see pictures of the Queen’s cars60 years of Royal cars President Hollande is generally seen in a Citroen DS5, as this is the most prestigious French-made car currently available; alternatively he also has routine access to the slightly more limo-like Citroen C6.

The cars of Ayrton Senna

Thu, 01 May 2014

Twenty years ago today – 1 May 1994 – the world lost arguably the most talented Formula One driver ever: Ayrton Senna. Numbers alone don’t quite describe the genius the Brazilian driver showed at the wheel of all manner of cars throughout his career, finding time and speed where others simply couldn’t. So, on the 20th anniversary of Senna’s death in a tragic accident at the 1994 San Marino Grand Prix at Imola – only a day after Roland Ratzenberger, a young Austrian driver and friend of Senna, also sadly lost his life, while qualifying – we’re celebrating the life of one of Formula One’s most charismatic drivers.