Mercedes 190 Rear Trunk Emblem W110 1961-1965 190c Fintail on 2040-parts.com
Roanoke, Virginia, United States
Brakes for Sale
- 1969 chevy camaro brake booster
- Brake master cylinder 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 plymouth new(US $139.99)
- Master cylinder repair kit dart 1963-66(C $16.50)
- Master cylinder repair kit chev. 1955-57 all,1958 pontiac(C $20.00)
- Brake cooling kit, replacement scoop, right, for porsche®, 1969-1989(US $88.99)
- Brake caliper, left front, new part, fiat bertone x1/9 128 131 yugo scorpion(US $35.00)
Autoweek in review: Geneva previews, IndyCar troubles and Ram goes diesel
Fri, 15 Feb 2013On Monday we talked about the 2014 Corvette Stingray and its place in Corvette history. We also checked out a used Porsche race car on Bring a Trailer and looked at which Formula One teams are not at risk of collapsing. We awoke on Tuesday to see video of a helicopter crashing during filming of “Top Gear Korea.” We looked at the interior of the McLaren P1 and saw some shots of the Alfa Romeo 4C before its reveal at the Geneva motor show.
Car-buying confidence hits new high
Mon, 07 Apr 2014THE NUMBER of people who believe they will buy a new car in the next three years has jumped to 71%, according to the latest AA Car Purchase Index; up from 55% last year. Of the 19,786 survey respondents who said they were going to buy a new car, 42% said they would choose a petrol engine, with 38% saying definitely diesel. A further 13% don’t know what fuel type they will opt for, but 7% will choose some kind of hybrid and 1% will go fully electric – a total of exactly 100 respondents.
Car sales plunge, Bank of England cuts rates
Thu, 06 Nov 2008New car sales plunge in October: Renault sales were down by more than half By Nigel Wonnacott Motor Industry 06 November 2008 12:30 Following the sixth monthly decline in new car sales this year (down 23% this month), economists have revised market forecasts downwards, while the Bank of England has cut interest rates by 1.5%. October’s 23% drop was the worst so far and trade body SMMT now fears sales could end the year at just 2.15 million cars. That’s 8% lower than the 2.34 million predicted to leave showrooms back in January and would be the worst market performance in more than a decade.