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Rochester 2 Bbl Carburetor 78-78 Chevy Buick Olds Pontiac Chevrolet Truck on 2040-parts.com

US $20.00
Location:

New Plymouth, Ohio, US

New Plymouth, Ohio, US
:

Here is a used 2 bbl rochester carb. It has the number 17058110 on it which my book shows it used on various 75-78 GM cars and trucks. It seems to be in good condition, the choke and throttle plates move freely. I have listed it for parts or not working just because I have never heard an engine run that it was on. It would probably need rebuilt before use. I ship to the 48 states only. Ask any questions before bidding. Thanks for looking!!

Concept Car of the Week: Ford Forty-Nine (2001)

Fri, 03 May 2013

Over 1.3 million orders were placed for the 1949 Ford before it even went officially on sale. The revolutionary post-war design with slick slab sides and semi-covered wheels became a symbol of American optimism. "The inspiration for the Forty-Nine concept comes from the passion and excitement of the original, combined with the imagination of people across America who customized the car and turned it into what they thought a really great car should be," said J Mays, Ford's vice president of Design at the unveiling of the retro-futurist coupe back in 2001.

Car insurance small print longer than Animal Farm

Thu, 24 Apr 2014

Aslan Alphan | Getty Images The small print on car insurance policies from a number of leading firms is longer than George Orwell’s novel Animal Farm, according to a consumer website. Fairer Finance waded through the small print of “every” car insurance policy, and found that the policy documents produced by Endsleigh, Sheila’s Wheels, Esure and M&S Bank run to more than 30,000 words. Less than a third read car insurance terms and conditions The highest word count found by researchers came from Endsleigh, with a grand total of 37,674 words in the small print.

German car makers are dropping big engines

Sat, 29 Nov 2008

[ad#ad-1] It’s the trend at the moment, and one that won’t go down very well with our American cousins, who are fond of saying that ‘There ain’t no substitute for cubic inches’, as the three big luxury German Car Companies – Audi BMW and Mercedes – are planning to move away from their big ‘V’ engines. BMW V10 - on the way out The news started last week, when Audi let it be known that their new S5 will not use the V8, but will instead use a supercharged V6. Earlier this week, news came from BMW that its next generation of ‘M’ cars will forsake the V10s so beloved of M owners, and will instead go for turbo versions of the V8.