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Sealed Power 1204m Cam Bearings Direct Replacement B100 Ford Mercury Sb Kit on 2040-parts.com

US $20.97
Location:

Tallmadge, OH, US

Tallmadge, OH, US
Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Refund will be given as:Money Back Item must be returned within:60 Days Return policy details:Items may be returned within 90-days or purchase for a refund or exchange, if in new and unused condition. Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Restocking Fee:No Other Part Number:SLP-1204M Brand:Federal-Mogul Manufacturer Part Number:1204M UPC:724956044122

Engine Bearings for Sale

Why the Volvo XC90 changed the modern face of Volvo

Tue, 26 Aug 2014

By Tim Pollard Motoring Issues 26 August 2014 08:29 Volvo is a brand that’s quietly undergone some serious change in recent years. From a purveyor of boxy practicality through an attempt to inject some R-flavoured, BTCC-hooning sporting excitement; from a Swedish outpost of the Ford empire to Chinese ownership. Volvo’s seen it all over these past three decades.

Jeremy Hicks is new Jaguar Land Rover UK MD

Wed, 02 Nov 2011

Jaguar Land Rover UK appoints Jeremy Hicks (pictured) as Managing Director Jaguar Land Rover have decided to tidy up their management structure at JLR UK, and have appointed a single Managing Director for Jaguar Land Rover UK, which brings JLR UK in to line with the practice in other JLR regions around the world. Historically, probably because Jaguar and Land Rover were originally separate entities in the UK, Jaguar UK and Land Rover UK have had their own Managing Directors – until this reshuffle they were Geoff Cousins at Jaguar and Colin Green at Land Rover – but with JLR growing strongly worldwide it was felt it was time to tidy things up. That means the arrival of former Audi UK boss Jeremy Hicks to the fold as the new MD of JLR UK.

Florida man claims ownership of long-lost Cunningham Corvette

Mon, 27 Aug 2012

A Florida man says the long-lost 1960 Chevrolet Corvette race car that made a brief public appearance in Carlisle, Pa., last week was owned and raced by his father in the 1970s, and claims the car belongs to him. The challenged ownership of the maroon-colored car--one of three raced in the 1960 24 Hours of Le Mans by Briggs Cunningham and valued by some collectors at more than $1 million--could be the reason organizers of the Corvettes at Carlisle show canceled a planned public display on Aug. 24 less than 30 minutes before the scheduled start time.