New Elgin 1955-1957 Chevy Inner Control Arm Rubber Replacement Busings, Lower on 2040-parts.com
Lincoln, Nebraska, US
Suspension & Steering for Sale
- '69-'82 corvette steering gear box w/ rag joint and pitman arm(US $75.00)
- New old stock flathead ford 1932-34 ford shock arms scta(US $25.00)
- 63-66 mopar early a body k member mounting bolts dart gt valiant barracuda b e(US $30.00)
- Mopar a body sway bar left lower control arm 63-72 barracuda formula s dart gt(US $100.00)
- Moapr neon models lower control arm bushing n.o.s.(US $2.99)
- Nos mopar steering coupling repair kit(US $27.99)
Seat celebrates 60 years of production
Thu, 14 Nov 2013SPANISH car maker Seat has this week celebrated its 60th anniversary, releasing pictures dating back to its very first model, the 1400. Six decades have now passed since the first 1400 rolled off the production line, when the brand new company was inundated with 10,000 orders following the end of petrol rationing in Spain. With so much production demand Seat was able to drop the initial price of 121,875 to a more reasonable 117,000 pesetas, or what would have been about £590 at the time.
MINI First introduced
Fri, 17 Jul 2009MINI has a new budget model - The MINI First With all things Eco the flavour of the month, and with budgets stretched in households everywhere, a cheap, entry-level budget MINI is a tempting prospect. You still get the iconic shape, and you still get a very good chassis – which translates in to good handling and a decent ride – but you’re not paying a fortune for the fripperies. After all, there are MINIs that will set you back £25k (the MINI JCW Cabriolet), but the new MINI First is a very tempting £10,950.
Italy’s Supercar sales down 80% as Italy heads for 50 year car sales low
Sat, 06 Apr 2013Sales of Supercars in Italy have dropped 80% in the last 5 years and car sales look set to drop to the lowest point since 1966. We all know the Eurozone is finally paying the price for stitching together powerhouse economies and basket case ones with the same blunt fiscal tools to control their economies. And even Italy – once a major Southern European economy – seems to be as big a basket case as Greece and Cyprus if you start to dig a bit.