Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

New 2" Diameter Nylon Rope,6" C.ship/boat Tow/dock Line on 2040-parts.com

US $49.99
Location:

LAKE CHARLES, LOUISIANA, US

LAKE CHARLES, LOUISIANA, US
Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Refund will be given as:Money Back Item must be returned within:30 Days Return policy details:At our discretion/acceptance all other returns will be as follows: Customer returns item in same package and in same condition as shipped, payment refunded - deducting 20% restocking fee and all shipping charges. Customer has 30 days to inspect item for damage, missing parts, etc. After 30 days, the sale is final and no returns or damage claims will be accepted. Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Restocking Fee:No

Alfa Romeo 8C Spider at Goodwood – Alfa Romeo Goodwood News

Thu, 02 Jul 2009

Alfa Romeo are running the Alfa 8C Spider up the Hillclimb at Goodwood The Alfa Romeo 8C Spider is the convertible version of the limited run Alfa Romeo 8C Competizione, and features a 4.7 litre V8 producing 450bhp. In truth the coupe version looked a lot better than it drove but, being an Alfa, its looks redeemed it. And the 8C Spider is a cracking looking car.

Toyota Recall Update: Half of UK cars now fixed

Mon, 15 Mar 2010

Toyota has fixed half of the 180k cars recalled over the sticky throttle problems It seems like forever ago that we revealed the enormous problems Toyota had with a mass worldwide recall on a  chunk of the cars they’ve produced in the last few years, but it’s actually only a little over a month – even less since we reported on the Prius recall. But having reported the negatives about Toyota – deservedly so – it’s only fair to report the positives. The Toyota Recall for the sticky accelerator affected a rather significant 180,965 cars in the UK alone.

F1 Budget Cap – No two-tier system says Ecclestone

Sun, 17 May 2009

Bernie Ecclestone says there will be no two-tier system in the F1 budget cap row [ad#ad-1] All eyes have gone off the stunning start to this year’s F1 circus with the news that Ferrari, Renault, Red Bull and several other teams have threatened to quit F1 next year in protest at the budget cap proposal and the two-tier system that appears to create. In a nutshell, the FIA – lead by Max Mosley – has imposed a £40 million cap on F1 team expenditure for next year (excluding driver costs, marketing costs and transport), but has said that teams who don’t adhere to the cap can still compete, but will be handicapped. Not surprisingly, the richer teams have objected and, on the face of it, it starts to look as if F1 as we know it is going to bite the dust.