Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Maserati> 15"les Leston >60s>vintage Wood Steering Wheel >nos on 2040-parts.com

US $1,950.00
Location:

London, GB

London, GB
:


I have for sale an original and RARE 60s 15" ORIGINAL LES LESTON flat slotted spokes  MADE IN BRITAIN steering wheel to fit all  MASERATIS pre air back (hub subject to confirmation of model and year)

* 2 Horn buttons (including the LL chequered flag) to suit the interior of your car

* Mahogany rim FRENCH POLISHED by hand to a superb finish

* Alloy spokes re-polished (front only) with some patina retained for authenticity

* A RARE wheel for the price of NARDI REPLICA




  







Saab back online as NEVS rebuilds the Saab Brand

Sat, 02 Feb 2013

The Saab website has now come back online with NEVS (National Electric Vehicle Sweden) outlining its plans to rebuild the Saab Brand. Back in September the long-running Saab Saga was finally concluded, with the sale of what’s left of Saab after Victor Muller’s  little adventure saw Saab left as nothing more than another defunct icon brand from the annuls of motoring history, with NEVS taking control of Saab. The plan is to build a range of electric cars in Trollhattan and China, initially based on the Saab 9-3 platform but eventually developing the Phoenix platform in to the basis for Saab’s future.

2011 Mercedes S63 AMG 5.5 litre Biturbo revealed +video

Sat, 31 Jul 2010

The 2011 Mercedes S63 AMG get the new 5.5 Litre BiTurbo V8 Mercedes intend phasing out the much loved – and wonderfully linear – 6.2 litre, naturally aspirated V8 which graces AMG Mercedes models across the range, from C Class to S Class and E class to CL Class. Such a wonderfully exhilarating engine, it’s a real shame to see it bow out under the pressure of ridiculous CO2 and economy targets. So the 2011 Mercedes S63 AMG gets a new engine.

Budget 2011: Fuel duty CUT & tuppence for potholes

Wed, 23 Mar 2011

Motorists Budget 2011 No once expected huge give-aways in George Osborne’s second budget – especially as we now have cruise missiles to pay for in Libya – but the hope was that the Chancellor would at least address the inexcorable rise in the cost of fuel. Which he has – sort of. Fuel was due to increase by around 5p a litre next week if he’d left Labour’s fuel duty escalator in place.