Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Mgb Heater Fan Motor Assembly on 2040-parts.com

US $43.00
Location:

Boulder City, Nevada, US

Boulder City, Nevada, US
Item must be returned within:14 Days Refund will be given as:Money Back Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Restocking Fee:No Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Return policy details: Other Part Number:363-040 Warranty:No Country of Manufacture:United Kingdom

 This is a good used heater fan motor assembly for 1968-1980 MGB. Tests good on bench. Fits Rd/GT from c)168401 on. Has the plastic fan. Ready to install as is or you could pretty it up a little for a first class installation. 

One Lap of the Web: No limits Down Under, a busted F50 and cheap speed

Tue, 15 Oct 2013

-- Autobahn enthusiasts can add a new no-limits destination to their drive routes: Australia's Northern Territory, where a stretch of the Stuart Highway will eliminate speed limits during a one-year trial. Just watch out for Wallabies. -- Who's afraid of a little ol' salvage title, especially when it comes to an ultrarare Ferrari F50 supercar?

Opinion: Discovery Sport and the long-term ramifications of pandering to the crossover convergence

Wed, 03 Sep 2014

Having pored over the first pictures of the new Land Rover Discovery Sport and consumed the accompanying official literature, we’re left wondering why it shares so much of its design treatment with the Range Rover Evoque, while simultaneously removing the last vestiges of utility from the Discovery nameplate. From its virtually indistinguishable grille and lamp graphics, over its tapered roofline to its bespoilered tail, it’s hard to describe it as anything other than a derivative of the Evoque. The difference between a Discovery and a Range Rover it would seem, is a body coloured C-pillar.

Third annual World Automotive Design Competition

Wed, 10 Mar 2004

The third annual World Automotive Design Competition, sponsored by Alias, was hosted by the Canadian International Auto Show in Toronto, Ontario, on February 12. Britain's Coventry School of Art and Design, and Tsinghua University in Beijing, China were the big winners, together garnering seven of the eight prizes. Ninety-four students from twenty design schools from China, Brazil, Japan, France, Korea, England, Wales, Italy, Spain, India, Sweden, the USA and Canada competed to win over US$140,000 in prizes.