Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Offenhauser 1068-425 High Comp 38-48 Flathead Heads Polished Nos!!! W/ Bolt Caps on 2040-parts.com

US $675.00
Location:

Henderson, Nevada, United States

Henderson, Nevada, United States
Condition:New

Up for auction is a set of Offenhauser polished early Ford/Mercury flathead cyl heads.  They are the high compression version that is no longer available and very hard to come by.  This set is new in the original packaging with a set of bolt caps and two new head gaskets.  This deal will not last and you wont find these new again for a long time, buy now!

I will happily ship international through a re-shipper you select.  Do not wish to deal with customs and other such myself.

Peugeot 207 Outdoor

Thu, 08 Mar 2007

By Ben Whitworth Motor Shows 08 March 2007 09:11 207 estate joins hatch and CC line-up Peugeot calls it the 207 Outdoor Concept. We call it the 207 SW estate, and it arrives here in July, minus the glitzy showcar bits. Based on the 207 chassis, the estate will use all the hatchback’s transmissions and engines bar the 1.6-litre turbo found in the GTI, with prices starting around the £10,000 mark.

New (2013) Skoda Octavia Estate: Price from £16,790

Tue, 05 Mar 2013

The new Skoda Octavia Estate has had its official debut at the 2013 Geneva Motor Show, and Skoda has revealed it will cost from £16,790 The new Octavia Estate gets a choice of four engine options – two petrol and two diesel – with the 1.2 TSI 105PS, 1.4 TSI 140PS, 1.6 TDI CR 105 PS and 2.0 TDI CR 150PS offering a decent set of everyday choices all of which come with a standar manual ‘box, although you can spec the diesel engines with a DSG ‘box. Trim levels mimic those of the Octavia hatch, with S, SE and Elegance. The Octavia S Estate comes with 16″ alloys, Bluetooth, DAB, electric front windows, Climate, Stop-Start and Touchscreen.

Budget 2011: Fuel duty CUT & tuppence for potholes

Wed, 23 Mar 2011

Motorists Budget 2011 No once expected huge give-aways in George Osborne’s second budget – especially as we now have cruise missiles to pay for in Libya – but the hope was that the Chancellor would at least address the inexcorable rise in the cost of fuel. Which he has – sort of. Fuel was due to increase by around 5p a litre next week if he’d left Labour’s fuel duty escalator in place.