Th400 Turbo 400 Transmission Finned Aluminum Pan Moroso Drag Race Chevy on 2040-parts.com
Crystal Lake, Illinois, United States
Like new deep aluminum cast pan
Never bolted on transmission For Chevrolet TH400 Turbo automatic 3 speed |
Transmission Components for Sale
- Red line oil 30316 racing lightweight atf(US $53.95)
- Used dgb dgn top gear set 28/28 hewland, march and staffs gearboxes.(US $75.00)
- Used dgb dgn top gear set 23/26 hewland, march and staffs gearboxes.(US $75.00)
- Used dgb dgn top gear set 20/24 hewland, march and staffs gearboxes.(US $75.00)
- Used dgb dgn top gear set 23/26 hewland, march and staffs gearboxes.(US $75.00)
- Used dgb dgn top gear set 22/26 hewland, march and staffs gearboxes.(US $75.00)
GM bets on new four-cylinder family in Europe; U.S. plans unclear
Wed, 10 Oct 2012General Motors' European subsidiary, Opel, has revealed a turbocharged 1.6-liter four-cylinder direct-injection gasoline engine that will be offered from early 2013 across its lineup, starting with the soon-to-be-revealed Astra-based Cascada convertible. The aluminum block unit, the first in a new range of so-called SIDI (spark ignition direct injection) ECOTEC engines, forms the centerpiece of the company's downsizing strategy for displacement. The engine is claimed to have improved torque characteristics and a significant reduction in consumption compared with its predecessor.
Learner driver sits test 110 times
Tue, 13 Aug 2013A 28-year-old woman has sat her driving theory test 110 times, costing the unnamed candidate a whopping £3,410 in test fees. It’s unknown whether the candidate actually passed her driving theory test at the 110th attempt. Reported by the Daily Mirror, the figures released under a Freedom of Information Act request to the Driver and Vehicle Licencing Agency (DVLA) stand as a new record for failing the first section of the UK’s two-part driving test.
Study Highlights Perils Of Distracted Driving
Thu, 02 Jan 2014IF YOUR mind has ever wandered when behind the wheel you’ll likely relate to this latest study of driver behaviour. According to the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development in Maryland, USA, motorists typically have their eyes off the road for a tenth of the time they are driving. Worryingly, for 10 per cent of their journey they are eating, reaching for the phone, texting or engaged in other activities that cause concentration to wander away from what is happening beyond the windscreen.