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Magnaflow 36501 Direct Fit California Catalytic Converter 75-79 Fiat/lancia on 2040-parts.com

US $310.60
Location:

Fort Lauderdale, Florida, US

Fort Lauderdale, Florida, US
Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Refund will be given as:Money Back Item must be returned within:30 Days Return policy details:Returns must be in new and unused condition. We will not accept for return any item that has been installed for any reasont. Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Restocking Fee:No Brand:Magnaflow California Converter Manufacturer Part Number:36501 UPC:841380000000

Catalytic Converters for Sale

Daydreaming of nudist beaches whilst driving? BMW has the answer.

Wed, 02 May 2012

BMW Lane Departure Warning - just in case you're daydreaming BMW has a new advert for its lane departure warning system featuring a daydreaming man and his vibrating head. We’ve all done it (well, we all have) – managed to drive to wherever we’re going without remembering a single thing about the uneventful journey. We all think that if something did happen our brains would jump back in to focus and attend to whatever it is that needs attending to.

Meet the new Goodyear blimp -- er, airship

Mon, 17 Mar 2014

A new blimp comes around only once in a while, and Goodyear slowly replacing its fleet is cause for fanfare. These new airships, as yet unnamed, will fly farther, go faster and carry more people than ever before -- and none of it would be possible without help from the Germans. This newest airship is a collaboration between Goodyear and ZLT Zeppelin Luftschifftechnik -- yes, of that Zeppelin fame -- and the partnership has historical precedent.

Rockin' Supercar: The Rebirth, Short Life, and Death of a Shark-Fin-Equipped '85 Toyota Tercel Wagon

Fri, 18 Apr 2014

Sometimes a very ordinary car becomes something special, maybe even loved, but that's not always enough to keep it out of the jaws of the crusher. This is the story of a second-gen Toyota Tercel wagon (known in Japan as the Sprinter Carib) and its journey from auction to lumber-hauler to kid transportation to a Chinese steel factory. Around the turn of the century, while I was working at a doomed dot-com in San Francisco's South of Market neighborhood, I discovered that the city auctioned off all the unclaimed tow-away cars every week at nearby Pier 70.