Mercedes W111 220se 250se 280se Oil Dipstick Fintail Heckflosse Original on 2040-parts.com
Miami, Florida, United States
For sale Mercedes w111 220se 250se 280se Oil Dipstick Fintail Heckflosse original, used condition, structurally its good the dip stick is slightly bent, but its an easy fix to get it corrected, then it has defects from age and wear, some oil stains, superficial rust.
Thank you, |
Other for Sale
- Vintage compucruise model 44 cruise control by zemco - hot rod classic cool new(US $150.00)
- Deluxe engine kit 1950-54 pontiac 268 w 1 1/8" op gear(US $1,399.99)
- Complete emissions pump system(US $75.00)
- Porsche 356 / 912 oil canister bracket(US $59.00)
- Porsche 911 cabriolet engine suspension mounting bracket(US $475.00)
- Porsche 356 / 912 engine oil dipstick genuine c#4(US $57.00)
Ford B-Max (2012) - first photos of the production car
Wed, 01 Feb 2012Ford will slide the covers off this production B-Max mini MPV at the 2012 Geneva motor show. It's little changed from 2011's B-Max concept car. The B-Max essentially replaces the fuddy-duddy (but quite strong-selling) Fusion in Europe and is one of the key reasons why we're not getting the EcoSport baby SUV shown at the Delhi motor show in January 2012.
Government driving down electric avenue
Mon, 21 Jul 2014THE GOVERNMENT is to lead by example by buying more than 150 electric and plug-in hybrid cars for its fleets. All fleet managers will have funding allocated with a view to buying ultra-low-emission vehicles (ULEVs) to replace older vehicles as part of the their normal working life cycle. According to Westminster sources, a long-term plan is in place to make such cars and vans entirely commonplace.
Armadillo-T electric vehicle concept folds up for easy storage
Thu, 22 Aug 2013From postwar Packards to Beetles old and New, there are no shortage of cars that vaguely resemble the armadillo. Yet none, so far as we know, have mastered the shelled mammal's impressive vertical leap -- and none possess that oh-so-armadillian trait, the ability to curl up into a little protective ball. Not more than once, anyway.