Silverhorse Trunk Release Kit Glove Box Mounted Oem Switch Wiring Harness Ford on 2040-parts.com
Tallmadge, Ohio, US
Other for Sale
- Tein wheel tyre tire valve stem air dust covers caps anti-theft locking(US $6.99)
- Porsche horn update kit 993 style horns 2 tone oem new + 1 year warranty(US $75.70)
- Yamaha yellow wheel tyre tire valve stem air dust covers caps anti-theft locking(US $6.99)
- Yamaha black wheel tyre tire valve stem air dust covers caps anti-theft locking(US $6.99)
- Yamaha red wheel tyre tire valve stem air dust covers caps anti-theft locking(US $6.99)
- Yamaha blue wheel tyre tire valve stem air dust covers caps anti-theft locking(US $6.99)
NYC carriages about to go extinct?
Fri, 18 Apr 2014If you love taking horse-drawn carriage rides in New York City, you best hurry -- they might be replaced with new horseless carriages by next year. At the New York auto show Florida-based car restoration firm The Creative Workshop introduced an eight-passenger electric horseless carriage designed to replace today's horse-drawn carriages. The company says its car blends “early 20th-century style, nostalgia and romance with 21st century eco-technology, comfort and safety,” calling the Horseless eCarriage the first brass-era-type car in more than 100 years.
2014 Jeep Cherokees finally en route to dealerships
Mon, 21 Oct 2013Car haulers loaded with 2014 Jeep Cherokee stick out on the flat farmland like elephants on the savannah -- lumbering behemoths easy to spot, even from miles away. In ones and twos they rumble the 15 miles west from Chrysler Group's massive Toledo, Ohio, assembly complex toward a former supplier-owned automotive testing center. The Cherokees were due in dealerships almost two months ago but have been held while Chrysler developed and installed new software to smooth out the way the engine, nine-speed transmission and innovative disconnecting drivetrain interact.
Kansas City car dealer admits to sending $23,500 to al-Qaida
Fri, 21 May 2010A Kansas City used-car and auto-parts dealer admitted in federal court to sending $23,500 to terrorist group al-Qaida. Khalid Ouazzani pleaded guilty on Wednesday to terrorism-related charges in court in Missouri and admitted he sent the money to the terrorist organization through a bank in the United Arab Emirates in 2007-08. He also pleaded guilty to bank fraud and money laundering.