Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Sierra Exhaust Bellows 18-2750 on 2040-parts.com

US $35.52
Location:

Eagle, Michigan, United States

Eagle, Michigan, United States
Condition:New Manufacturer Part Number:18-2750 Country/Region of Manufacture:Italy Brand:Sierra UPC:Does not apply

These are EXHAUST BELLOWS, part #18-2750 manufactured by SIERRA. It replaces MERCRUISER 32734A3, 18654A1 ALL #1 UNITS. (USES 18-7305 CLAMP)  Please call (517)719-9980 if you need to know other applications. Thanks for shopping at Marc's Marine.

Vauxhall Corsa VXR (2007): first official pictures

Wed, 03 Jan 2007

By Tim Pollard First Official Pictures 03 January 2007 00:01 Vauxhall Corsa VXR: the lowdown Vauxhall will unleash its hottest-ever supermini in March: the 190bhp Corsa VXR. In keeping with the UK-only VXR branding, the hot hatch will be spruced up with a butch bodykit, a series of chassis tweaks and a turbocharged version of Vauxhall's 1.6-litre engine. Vauxhall's previous sporting superminis have left us lukewarm, but this latest one promises some fireworks in the engine department: the company quotes 0-62mph in just 6.8sec, and it tops out at 140mph.

Fallen Michigan police officers honored at Woodward Dream Cruise

Fri, 14 Aug 2009

Joe Roeder can't help but feel pride when he talks about the memorial he has created for fallen Michigan police officers. Since 2002, he has outfitted a Jaguar with the help of donors to ride in Detroit's Woodward Dream Cruise. This year, Roeder, an auxiliary sergeant with the Hazel Park Police Department in Michigan, will cruise in a 2009 Jaguar XF donated by Jaguar of Troy.

Cyclists urged to make themselves visible

Tue, 22 Oct 2013

CYCLISTS have been warned to take precautions to make themselves easier to see, in time for the darker evenings of winter time. The clocks are set to wind back by an hour this Sunday, bringing darkness down on homeward commutes and making collisions involving cyclists statistically more likely. A survey of 1,000 cyclists, carried out by Autoglass, found that 48% had been caught without lights or high-visibility clothing when the clocks go back.