Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Sierra 18-5116 Ignition Sensor For Mercruiser V-8 V8 87-861780q4 on 2040-parts.com

US $29.00
Location:

Richmond, Virginia, United States

Richmond, Virginia, United States
Condition:New other (see details) Brand:Sierra Manufacturer Part Number:18-5116

These have less than one hour run time on them. I bought them while trying to diagnose what ended up being a defective Thunderbolt-IV ignition module. I ended up replacing the entire ignition system on both engines instead. 

Direct replacement for Mercruiser 87-861780Q4

Cautious welcome for fuel duty freeze

Tue, 01 Oct 2013

MOTORING groups have given a cautious welcome to Chancellor George Osborne's announcement of a freeze on fuel duty until May 2015. Both the AA and the RAC pointed out that Mr Osborne was already getting big sums from motorists in taxation. Professor Stephen Glaister, director of the RAC Foundation, said: "Transport is the single biggest area of household expenditure bar none and our own research shows that 800,000 of the poorest households are in transport poverty, spending a quarter or more of their income on running a car.

One lap of the Web: $52 million Ferrari 250 GTO, Alfa Romeo Montreal for sale and more bizarro engines

Mon, 07 Oct 2013

-- Even as the hammer fell on Juan Manuel Fangio's $30 million Mercedes-Benz W196R, we knew that that car wasn't the most expensive one ever sold -- it was merely the most expensive car sold at auction. Other cars were reported to have traded for a bit more in private sales. But now we have word of a car that absolutely blows the sale price of Fangio's little Silver Arrow out of the water: a 1963 Ferrari 250 GTO that sold to an undisclosed buyer for $52 million.

Phone use penalty 'could double'

Wed, 16 Jul 2014

THE PENALTY for using a mobile phone while driving could be doubled under proposals being examined by the Government as part of a safety drive, Transport Secretary Patrick McLoughlin said. Metropolitan Police Commissioner Sir Bernard Hogan-Howe has called for offenders to be handed six points on their licence rather than the present three, meaning a ban from getting behind the wheel if caught twice in three years. Mr McLoughlin said it was an "interesting suggestion" that he was considering in an effort to end the "appalling" number of people killed and seriously injured in accidents where a phone was being used in the hand.