Omc High Profile Bearing Housing 1968-1977 Electric Shift #132 on 2040-parts.com
Jensen Beach, Florida, United States
OMC High Profile Bearing Housing 1968 - 1977 Electric Shift In good condition Needs cleaning, bearings and seals |
Ignition & Starting Systems for Sale
- Omc low profile bearing housing 1968-1985 #145(US $50.00)
- Marine heavy duty battery cable 4/0 18" with ends black(US $21.99)
- 5732n 12v force outboards 61-6955 replacement starter(US $53.91)
- Mercury mercruiser 808483q2 ignition distributor cap & rotor v8 delco 1998 & up(US $45.95)
- 3902n 24v prestolite ms7-300a replacement starter(US $356.00)
- Sierra marine 18-5404-1 distributor rotor omc 982211 chris craft 16.69-00149(US $5.99)
Ford Focus 1.0 litre EcoBoost drops below 100g/km & Focus range gets tweaked
Tue, 13 Aug 2013The Ford Focus 1.0 litre EcoBoost (pictured) drops below 100g/km The 1.0 litre. 3-cylinder EcoBoost engine Ford has been rolling out across its range recently is a cracking little engine, and a much better option for most private buyers than a diesel version. Now, Ford has given buyers who want a sub-100g/km car the chance to finally buy a petrol car instead of an oil burner with the first family-sized car with a petrol engine to break the 100g/km barrier.
Win the first new Jaguar XJ
Mon, 19 Oct 2009Jaguar are hoping to raise £1 million for the NSPCC in a ‘Win a new XJ’ competition But the work of actually getting the XJ in to customers’ hands in now the focus, and although we did an update on the new XJ’s progress recently there is nothing much more to report until cars hit the road in January. But if you want to have the privilege of owning the very first new XJ off the production line – a 3.0 litre diesel Portfolio worth £62k – you can enter a competition Jaguar are running to give away that very first car. Jaguar are hoping that sales of tickets for the competition – which cost £125 each – will raise £1 million for the NSPCC’s ‘Child’s Voice’ appeal, which is aiming to raise £50 million in total to fund its helplines.
Emissions crackdown confirmed
Sun, 03 Jun 2007By Tim Pollard Motoring Issues 03 June 2007 02:32 The European Commission today confirmed plans to force car makers to cut tailpipe emissions by 18 percent over the next five years. As exclusively predicted by CAR Online last month, the EC is proposing an average CO2 limit of 130g/km by 2012 - down from an average of 162g/km last year. Manufacturers missing the new target would be fined heavily.