Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Oil Cooler Adapter Plate, Pn 626332, Continental on 2040-parts.com

US $25.00
Location:

Virginia Beach, Virginia, United States

Virginia Beach, Virginia, United States
Condition:Used

Oil Cooler Adapter Plate
Part number 626332
Used but in good condition.

NOTE: The airworthiness of this part is to be determined by the installing mechanic in accordance with the Federal Aviation Regulations. I make no determination or claim about the airworthiness of this part.

No international sales/shipping.

VW exec Jacoby reportedly heading to Volvo

Thu, 24 Jun 2010

Volkswagen of America said it is in talks with CEO Stefan Jacoby, who reportedly has been tapped to run Volvo Car Corp. In the meantime, VW has temporarily named two executives to take over Jacoby's duties, the German automaker said in a statement Thursday. "We are holding contract talks with Stefan Jacoby," the statement said.

Previous owner of car in Paul Walker crash appears to be IndyCar driver Graham Rahal

Sun, 01 Dec 2013

The fifth owner of the 2005 Porsche Carrera GT in which "Fast and the Furious" actor Paul Walker and the car's owner and driver, Roger Rodas, were killed appears to have been IndyCar driver and avid car collector Graham Rahal. The car had six different owners since it was new. Rodas' Always Evolving car shop was the sixth owner.

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.