Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Mac Tools 18-pc. Macsimizer™ Pick And Scraper Set (psm18b) Most Unused on 2040-parts.com

US $159.99
Location:

Washougal, Washington, US

Washougal, Washington, US
Returns Accepted:ReturnsNotAccepted Part Brand:MAC Tools Manufacturer Part Number:PSM18B

Complete set with case. Most of these have never been used. Only the small picks have been used a handful of times, one of the carbon scrapers and black hooks have signs of wear. Purchased new from MAC distributor. This complete 18 piece set includes the following:


Macsimizer™ Mini 90° Pick PSM22 SOME WEAR 

Macsimizer™ Offset Pick PSPM23 LIKE NEW
Macsimizer™ Hook Pick PSPM24 LIKE NEW

Macsimizer™ Pick Hook SWM70A LIKE NEW


Other Hand Tools for Sale

Mini Crossover Concept: the first photos

Tue, 09 Sep 2008

By Tim Pollard First Official Pictures 09 September 2008 23:00 Here's the first look at the new Mini Crossover Concept – proof, at last, that BMW will indeed build a 4x4, SUV-lite version of the Mini. The Crossover concept car will be shown at the 2008 Paris motor show (where else?) and previews the production Mini SUV due in 2010. Mini Crossover Concept: the first official pictures Pore over these first official photographs carefully, because the new Mini Crossover Concept shows closely how the trendy brand's new SUV is shaping up and also reveals how the future face of the Mini brand is evolving.

Diesel hybrid cars avoid BIK penalty. Peugeot, Citroen & Volvo rejoice.

Fri, 18 Nov 2011

Peugeot 3008 HYbrid4 is the first car to benefit from BIK rates on diesel hybrids As a company car driver the Inland Revenue gets its cut no matter what. With BIK rates set based on CO2 emissions and list price, it’s hard to find a way to beat the system. Even opting for a diesel car doesn’t help because, despite much better economy on the whole from diesels than petrol engined cars, HMRC adds an extra 3% to your BIK rate because diesels emit more of the stuff that matters – particulates and NOx – than a petrol-engined car.

Germany plans to charge foreigners to drive on the Autobahn

Tue, 10 Dec 2013

Germany plans to charge foreigners to drive on the Autobahn It seems Germany is planning to charge to use the Autobahn network – just as France does – but it plans to levy the charge just on foreign visitors. The plan is part of a deal by Angela Merkel’s Social Democrat party to form a new coalition and would see all non-German drivers paying a fixed toll to use the Autobahns. But the plan is coming under fire from neighbouring countries (Germany has borders with nine other countries) and even from its own version of the AA – the ADAC – who say the revenue likely to be raised – around £220 million – will do little to address the costs.