Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Porsche 934/935 Alloy Center Lock Wheel Nuts - Style A on 2040-parts.com

US $350.00
Location:

Alexandria, Virginia, United States

Alexandria, Virginia, United States
Condition:Used

Porsche 934/935 orginal alloy centerlock wheel nuts. Style A. 1 left hand thread and 1 right hand thread. Sold as pair only. 1 in quantity = 1 pair. Only 1 pair available.

Powered by eBay Turbo Lister
The free listing tool. List your items fast and easy and manage your active items.

Other for Sale

Mini Cooper first pictures (2013) BMW’s new Mini goes back to the future

Mon, 18 Nov 2013

By Phil McNamara First Official Pictures 18 November 2013 09:00 Here comes BMW’s third new Mini since it relaunched the brand in 2001. But its appearance seems resolutely stuck in time, like John and Jackie Kennedy in Zapruder’s film of the Dallas motorcade, or like the fans who berated Bob Dylan for going electric.   There are no design surprises: the bodysides are curvy and more crisply pressed, the rear lamps supersized, otherwise the floating roof, wraparound chrome piping and wheel-at-each corner stance are all present and correct. ‘We need to be careful,’ BMW Group design director Adrian van Hooydonk told CAR.

Jeep Grand Cherokee to spawn Maserati SUV – confirmed

Mon, 22 Nov 2010

The 2003 Maserati Kubang SUV Concept The idea of an SUV from every luxury maker seemed a dead cert a few years ago. And then the world went in to financial meltdown and the eco-mentalists convinced a chunk of the car buying public that SUVs were the spawn of the devil, which put the kybosh on the nascent plans of many a car maker. But the recession hasn’t quite turned in to a depression (unless you’re one of the poor countries sucked in to the German Euro Zone), and many are now waking up to the fact that SUVs aren’t killing the planet and that CO2 is actually beneficial to planet earth, not harmful.

Rolls Royce to set up shop in South America

Sun, 23 Oct 2011

Rolls Royce showrooms planned in South America The paradox of the current economic malaise  is that luxury goods – and luxury cars in particular - seem immune from the problems of the mainstream. Rolls Royce – to many still the epitome of luxury motoring – is doing very well, and is now planning an expansion in to South America. The cynical may say that Rolls Royce want a piece of the drug money floating round South America in their coffers, but South America is far more than a bunch of drug barons freely spending illicit cash.