New Metro Roof Rail Seals, Rr4005 on 2040-parts.com
Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States
Auto Seals for Sale
- New metro roof rail seals, rr5008(US $50.66)
- 1968 1969 camaro firebird door weatherstrip seal lm22a metro usa made new(US $39.99)
- 2001-2007 ford escape belt line weather strip gasket seal rear passenger side(US $9.99)
- 2001 ford escape rear back hatch gasket seal approx. 151" long(US $19.99)
- New oe supplier windshield seal, 996 541 531 01(US $26.38)
- New oe supplier vertical roof seal, 993 561 321 00 8vb(US $175.11)
Jaguar to reveal first Jaguar Special Operations car at Goodwood Festival of Speed
Fri, 20 Jun 2014A new Jaguar Special Operation car is heading for Goodwood (Jaguar Project 7 pictured) It’s not just the new high performance Range Rover Sport from JLR’s Special Operations division that’s arriving at the Goodwood Festival of Speed next week, we’re also getting a new Special Operations car from Jaguar. It’s exactly a year since the Jaguar Project 7 F-Type (pictured above) was revealed at Goodwood as a precursor to the sort of cars JLR has in mind for its new Special Operation division, and now we’re getting the first fruits of the new division for Jaguar at Goodwood this year, although Jaguar aren’t yet letting on what it will be. Could it be a short-run, high-price production version of the Project 7 car, or will it be something else?
BMW Vision Gran Turismo: Coming soon to a console near you
Wed, 21 Aug 2013BMW's Vision Gran Turismo will be hitting TV screens across the world on 6 December as it joins the growing list of cars featured in the next Gran Turismo racing sim game for PlayStation. The sports coupé was created using cues from BMW's racing experience while the aerodynamic elements were developed using the carmaker's knowledge from the racetrack. It looks like the lovechild of a 6-Series and one of automotive futurist Daniel Simon's creations – in a good way.
General Motors design landmark gets second life--as a school
Tue, 14 Jul 2009"The profession was invented in this room,” says Richard Rogers, president of the College for Creative Studies (CCS), as he stands in the dusty construction site that used to be the General Motors Argonaut Building. “And this is where Harley Earl's office was.” Looking across the top floor of the building, it is easy to see a circle of concrete like the landing mark of a flying saucer. The circle is the remnant of an early platform for clay models, developed here for the first time as design tools for mass-production autos.