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New Radiator #1 Quality L 1row 1-5/16" Core L W/34" Wide Core L W/both Toc & Eoc on 2040-parts.com

US $112.00
Location:

California, US

California, US
Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Refund will be given as:Money back or exchange (buyer's choice) Item must be returned within:30 Days Return policy details:Buyer must contact us regarding issues/problems before sending item(s) back for return or exchange. Item(s) returned must be unused, unmodified, and in same condition received. Pictures are requested for all claims. Exchanges may require additional shipping fee to ship out exchanged item(s). A 30% re-stocking fee may be applied to returns and deducted from the total refund. Shipping fee is not refundable, unless wrong item(s) is received or shipped out. Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Restocking Fee:No

Radiators & Parts for Sale

Eight places to be this Memorial Day weekend, an AW list

Thu, 27 May 2010

Most people spend Memorial Day Weekend in the backyard, at a local beach or stuck in traffic. That's all well and good, but you, AutoWeek reader, are not most people. Where you should be this weekend: 1.

Contests Archive: CDN-GM Interactive Design Competition 2011

Thu, 15 Mar 2012

The Car Design News - GM Interactive Design Competition was open to design students across the USA and Canada. This was an open, online competition, which was held in the spirit of the web, where data and information are shared and exchanged with ease, and where people could come together to collaborate.  In this spirit, the judges were looking to see the contribution the entrants made within the wider online community and how they helped their competition peers. We advised students to engage in dialogue with those who commented on their work, and where they made changes to their design based on feedback they received to illustrate how and why this is so.

Early cars, fashion on display at the Petersen

Thu, 16 Sep 2010

Automotivated, a new exhibit at the Petersen Automotive Museum in Los Angeles, traces the evolution of clothes worn in cars--from the bulky circus-tent stuff people had to wear to keep from freezing to death in the jangly, open-topped conveyances of 100 years ago, up to the height of the European Concours in the 1920s and '30s, when what you and your date wore was just as important to winning best of show as the styling of your Delahaye/Delage/Talbot Lago. “In the earliest days of the automobile, you were sitting on the car, you weren't sitting in it,” said Leslie Kendall, curator at the Petersen. So the first section of the exhibit shows people (mannequins dressed as people) in heavy, practical overcoats, scarves and goggles.