National Oil Seals 370054a Front Inner Seal on 2040-parts.com
Temecula, California, US
Other for Sale
- National oil seals 370018a rear inner seal(US $36.01)
- National oil seals 444116 front inner seal(US $11.38)
- National oil seals 710398 front axle seal(US $18.78)
- National oil seals 710489 front axle seal(US $14.47)
- National oil seals 710479 wheel bearing seal(US $15.31)
- National oil seals 710530 front axle seal(US $44.87)
One Lap of the Web: Chevrolet, Caswell, custom Caterhams, crispy cars
Wed, 16 Apr 2014-- Louis Chevrolet -- along with brothers Gaston and Arthur -- were race-car pioneers long before Billy Durant ever made them into the Heartbeat of America. Louis was driving the No. 7 Frontenac when it caught fire at Sheepshead's Bay, Brooklyn, in September of 1919.
Hiriko folding car: The solution to urban car sharing? [w/video]
Wed, 08 Aug 2012The Hiriko Driving Mobility Group has moved into the manufacturing trial of its two-seater electric microcar, which it hopes will offer a new car-sharing program that will transform the way we travel around our cities. The ‘first-mile' problem – moving between the commuter's home and mass transit hubs – and the ‘last-mile' problem – from mass transit to the workplace – has increased dramatically over the past few decades as more of us live in urban environments. 10 years ago researchers at the Michigan Institute of Technology (M.I.T.) decided to explore alternatives to shuttle buses and other ideas that failed to tackle the problem.
Post-World War II Japanese tin toys on display in New York
Fri, 14 Aug 2009During the rebuilding of Japan after World War II, a Japanese toy designer took a discarded tin can and molded it into an intricate model car. Just inches in length, it created a phenomenon in the 1940s and '50s in Japan called “buriki.” Buriki is derived from “blik,” which is Dutch for "tin toy." A collection of 70 tin-toy vehicles manufactured in Japan is currently on display at New York's Japan Society Gallery. The exhibit, called “Buriki: Japanese Tin Toys from the Golden Age of the American Automobile, The Yoku Tanaka Collection,” runs until Aug.