Reman A-1 Cardone Master Cylinder Fits 1972-1973 Ford Pinto Cardone / A on 2040-parts.com
Hempstead, New York, United States
Master Cylinders & Parts for Sale
- Brake hydraulic line kit acdelco gm original equipment 22932568(US $87.85)
- New tokico brake master cylinder, 5851028320(US $61.58)
- New fte brake master cylinder repair kit, 69535593001(US $26.05)
- Reman a-1 cardone vacuum power brake booster w/o master cylinder fits 2(US $148.28)
- Brake master cylinder fits 2005-2010 nissan frontier pathfinder,xterra(US $157.17)
- 03 04 05 06 07 cadillac cts power brake booster 44541(US $96.20)
Porsche Macan gets four-cylinder powerplant
Wed, 23 Apr 2014The new entry level Porsche Macan, shown alongside the new Boxster and Cayman GTS at the Beijing motor show, has become the first Porsche model since the 968 to use four-cylinder power. Parent company Volkswagen's EA888 engine -- as used by a wide range of models from Volkswagen, Audi, Skoda and Seat -- will motivate the new Porsche SUV. The turbocharged 2.0-liter inline four-cylinder direct-injection unit, boasting the same state of tune found on the Golf GTi Performance Package, develops 234 hp and 258 lb-ft of torque between 1,500 and 4,500 rpm.
LA Motor Show: Ford Edge spin-off headed for Europe
Fri, 22 Nov 2013FORD HAS given European audiences an unusual teaser by revealing its new Edge large SUV at the Los Angeles Auto Show, before adding that it will come to Europe - with as-yet unconfirmed changes. The car is officially only a concept, as evidenced by the wild interior design. The exterior, however, has been tipped by Ford insiders to be more or less production-ready for North America.
The Super Bowl's most refreshingly honest car ad
Fri, 08 Feb 2013In 2000's High Fidelity, hapless record-store owner Rob Gordon -- played memorably by John Cusack -- opines, “What really matters is what you like, not what you are like." In the year 2000, I was 24 years old and was working on a punk rock magazine, an environment not dissimilar from Gordon's Championship Vinyl. The line made a lot of sense to me; it was a quiet, back-of-the-head maxim that informed much of what my friends and I did and how we saw people. It's a shallow way of looking at things, but for those of us who came of age amid the us-vs.-them liberal identity politics of the '90s, awash as we were in Public Enemy's political consciousness, the post-AIDS gay-rights push and the loud-fast feminism of the riot grrrl movement, there was a good chance that if somebody liked the things you liked, they thought like you and they were good.