Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Nos Vintage Accessory Arm Rests / Door Pull Handles on 2040-parts.com

Location:

Rochester, New York, United States

Rochester, New York, United States
Condition:New other (see details)

There was a time when a lot of cars and trucks came without armrests and/or door pull handles. This is a New Old Stock pair of accessory armrests made to address that shortcoming. The bottom half is cast metal with two mounting screw holes a hair over 8" apart. The top half is padded vinyl (still supple), secured to the base by three screws. The rest itself is 7-1/2" long, about 2-1/4" high, and protrudes from the door about 2-3/4". The finish on both parts is a neutral light grey (easily changed). Thank you for bidding. Buyer pays postage at cost plus $1.00 handling fee. Multiple auctions, postage combined, one handling fee. PayPal is preferred. Checks must clear.

Fabrizio Giugiaro conferred honorary doctorate

Mon, 19 Mar 2012

Fabrizio Giugiaro, Co-Chairman and Styling Director of Italdesign Giugiaro, has been given an honorary Doctorate by the Georgian Technical University (GTU) for his achievements in the fields of architecture and the technology and design of the automobile as well as his support in the creation and promotion of the institution's International School of design. During the ceremony, held on 15 March in the Georgian city of Tbilisi, Dean, Prof. Dr.

State Farm releases Driver Feedback app

Wed, 04 May 2011

Accelerometers aren't just for the autocross geeks who want to see whether they threw more than 1.0 lateral g's on their last apex. These gadgets have made their way to the iPhone. State Farm is releasing its Driver Feedback app, which uses the iPhone's high-tech guts (accelerometer, gyroscope and digital compass) to measure driving habits such as smoothness or aggressiveness during acceleration, frequency and abruptness of braking and how hard you take corners (ahem, BMW owners).

U.S., European models are hot at 2009 Tokyo Special Import Show

Fri, 10 Jul 2009

There are times when we have to wonder whether there really is a global economic crisis; the Tokyo Special Import Show is one of those times. The show in mid-June was all about bling--lots of it--with just enough performance pizzazz to liven things up. It's ironic that while U.S.