Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Oe Smiths Oil Pressure Gauge Triumph Tr6 1/73 On on 2040-parts.com

Location:

Dayton, Ohio, United States

Dayton, Ohio, United States
Condition:Used Brand:Smiths Country/Region of Manufacture:United Kingdom Manufacturer Part Number:PL2319/00

 You are purchasing a good used Original Equipment Smiths Oil pressure gauge for the Triumph TR6 from 1/73 on. 

This has been tested and it works. The face is dark and the letters and numbers are nice and white. The needle is a bit faded. The chrome and black painted rim is good, a couple small scratches that we touched up the paint. The case shows hardly any  rust. This includes 1 thumb nut and mounting bracket. The red bar is camera fault and not on the gauge.

A presentable gauge that works.

From a vintage British inventory, part number on the gauge face PL2319/00, Triumph number 159608.  

Photos are the actual gauge. 

Always happy to combine shipping.

Please view our auctions and other Ebay Store items for more NOS, new and one of a kind British parts.

Thanks!



One Lap of the Web: Lupe Fiasco, the Peel P50 and Dubai's supercar patrol fleet

Wed, 29 May 2013

We spend a lot of time on the Internet -- pretty much whenever we're not driving, writing about or working on cars. Since there's more out there than we'd ever be able to cover, here's our daily digest of car stuff on the Web you may not otherwise have heard about. -- This weekend was a car enthusiast's dream with the Indy 500, NASCAR Coca-Cola 600 and the Monaco Grand Prix.

Audi R8

Thu, 28 Sep 2006

By Ben Oliver Motor Shows 28 September 2006 01:46 The lowdown Audi has unveiled its first mid-engined sports car, the R8. The 420bhp, 4.2-litre V8-powered 911 rival will hit 188mph (or 301kph) and gets to 62mph in 4.6secs. The Lamborghini Gallardo-based supercar will cost an estimated £75,000 when it arrives in the UK in May, with the Audi R Tronic sequential manual costing an extra £5000.

L'argus European Design Competition 2004 winners announced

Wed, 07 Jan 2004

With its 3rd design competition, French automotive magazine L'argus de l'automobile challenged design students in the European Union to express their creativity on the theme 'Imagine the convertible commercial vehicle'. With a total of 350 designs submitted, the competition was a resounding success, confirming the interest design schools and their students are taking in this forward-looking competition. Starting out from a light commercial vehicle, the candidates had to propose changes adapted to the specific needs of their user: their basic vehicle could for example be transformed into a helicopter for delivery services, into a work platform for engineers, into a workshop for joiners.