Peugeot 404 504 Ba7 Gearbox Gaskets Set For, 2 Sets New Recently Made* on 2040-parts.com
Buenos Aires, Argentina
Gaskets for Sale
- Peugeot 403 404 solex 32 34 pbica carb gasket set for, 2 sets new recently made*(US $29.90)
- Peugeot 203 403 404 gearbox c2 / c3 gaskets set for, 2 sets new recently made*(US $29.90)
- Peugeot 403 engine gasket set for, new recently made*(US $89.90)
- Peugeot 203 403 404 504 rear axle gaskets set for, 2 sets new recently made*(US $29.90)
- Ford 1984/87 tempo, topaz "gasket" (intake manifold to cylinder head) 4cyl 2.3l(US $10.95)
- Seal radiator baffle 66 67 belvedere charger coronet gtx(US $14.00)
Color Conscious: Hues show off new technology, segments
Mon, 05 Oct 2009Henry Ford was quite content to offer one color on the Model T--black. Take it or leave it, as the legend goes. But that was in the days when horses were still considered primary transportation for many Americans.
MINI celebrates 100 years of car production in Oxford
Fri, 08 Mar 2013MINI will be celebrating a century of car production in Oxford on 28th March 2013, 100 years since the first Bullnose Morris Oxford was produced. It’s 100 years since the first Bullnose Morris Oxford rolled out on 28th March 1903, since when 11,655,000 cars have been built – with as many as 28,000 people employed in its heyday – and even Tiger Moth planes and Iron Lungs built alongside 80,000 repairs to Spitfires and Hurricanes during WWII. What is now MINI’s Plant Oxford was founded by William Morris – and Morris Motors kept control until 1952 – and has been owned and run by BMC, then British Motor Holdings (when Jaguar arrived), British Leyland (when Leyland Trucks, Triumph and Rover joined), nationalisation in the 1970s saw a variety of names, Rover Group arrived in 1986 and was subsequently privatised and sold in 1994 to BMW.
Google Car (self) drives into the future [w/video]
Wed, 28 May 2014After years of speculation, Google finally announced its Google Car autonomous vehicle at the Recode Code Conference in Palos Verdes, CA yesterday. Google CEO Sergey Brin unveiled the company's new two-seat, driverless vehicle at the software conference, underlining the company's aim of drastically reducing road deaths and injuries caused by human error, particularly by distracted drivers. "We're now exploring what fully self-driving vehicles would look like by building some prototypes; they'll be designed to operate safely and autonomously without requiring human intervention," said Brin.