PROTO DEEP 3/4 DRIVE SOCKETS .7/8 TO 1 1/2,PLUS 13/16 SQ.SURFACE RUST,WEAR FROM USE ,NOT WORN OUT,ALSO A 1/2 TO 3/4 ADAPTER(PROTO)A UNKNOWN "T"BAR,TWO EXTENSIONS(TRUE CRAFT)LOCK PIN TYPE ,LOOK HARDLY USED,A GOOD HEAVY DUTY SET.
Sockets & Ratchets for Sale
- Vintage snap on ratchet f713 (US $30.00)
- Matco tools silver eagle 18 piece 1/2 drive sae. deep impact socket set to 1-1/2(US $257.99)
- Matco tools 14 piece 1/2 drive metric deep 6 point socket set 10mm to 22mm, 24mm(US $244.99)
- Snap on tools 5 piece 1/2 drive sae. deep swivel impact flank drive socket set(US $144.99)
- Snap on 1/4 drive set(US $222.00)
- Mac 1/4 drive tools(US $125.00)
Ford B-Max: A grown up Fusion
Wed, 02 Mar 2011Ford B-Max bows in at Geneva The latest Ford Fiesta is one of our favourite small cars. Probably because it doesn’t feel like a small car, more like a down-sized Focus. Which makes it very good.
Ford Mondeo Vignale revealed – it’s back to the days of Ford Ghia
Wed, 04 Sep 2013The Ford Mondeo Vignale (picture) has been revealed as Ford’s new range-topper Mainstream car makers have always tried to add some glitz and gloss to their models by tagging on a badge they thought made their cars more exclusive. Like Ford with endless ‘Ghia’ models sitting at the top of the Ford range after they bought Ghia of Turin in 1970. Ford continued to use the Ghia badge to mark out its best-equipped models until very recently (you could still buy a Fiesta Ghia as recently as 2008) but they finally dropped the badge and moved their top of the tree badge over to the ‘Titanium’ moniker.
New CAFE proposal would add $5,000 to sticker price, dealer group says
Wed, 18 Jan 2012An Obama administration proposal to nearly double today's fuel economy standards could end up tacking on $5,000 to the sticker price of a new vehicle, a top official with the National Automobile Dealers Association said Tuesday. The proposal, which seeks to raise the corporate average fuel economy to 54.5 mpg by the 2025 model year, would force automakers to adopt costly fuel-saving technologies that could eventually price some buyers out of the new-car market, said Don Chalmers, chairman of NADA's government relations committee. NADA, a dealer trade association, represents 16,000 new-vehicle dealers who operate 32,500 franchises.