Other for Sale
- Tyc 19-5702-00 driving and fog light(US $57.54)
- Tyc 19-0179-00 driving and fog light(US $65.98)
- Tyc 18-5529-01 directional signal indicator(US $26.06)
- Tyc 18-3154-01 directional signal indicator(US $31.91)
- Tyc 12-5248-01 front turn signal(US $47.95)
- Tyc 11-3055-00 tail light(US $90.00)
Salon Privé 2011: Wet & Wonderful
Sun, 26 Jun 2011Salon Prive 2011 - wet, but wonderful We’ve said it before, and we’ll say it again: Salon Privé is one of our favourite ways to meet cars. Up there with Villa d’Este and Pebble Beach, it’s as civilised a way as you can imagine to soak up the greatest cars in the world. The greatest cars there are laid out in the sumptuous grounds of Syon Park (new venue; worked well), with food and drink in abundance.
Russo-Baltique Impression
Wed, 03 May 2006One hundred years since its conception, the Russo-Baltique brand has been resurrected for a show car at Villa d'Este Concours d'Elegance. Once the maker of cars for Russia's Royal Court, the country's Revolution suspended Russo-Baltique's activities after the First World War, only restored in 2003 when work on the new Impression began. The car aims to demonstrate a high level of quality, using materials such as Zebrano, an African wood, to trim the interior.
Crunch watch Dec 08: the auto industry in crisis
Wed, 31 Dec 2008By Tim Pollard and Simon Stiel Motor Industry 31 December 2008 14:05 Wednesday 31 December 2008• GMAC, GM's finance arm, said it would immediately revise its criteria for providing loans, after the US government bail-out of the General's credit arm. It will now supply credit for anyone with a score of 621 or more on the Fico scale, the scale used to assess Amercian customers' creditworthiness (Financial Times)• The news means that 80% of US consumers would now qualify for a loan from GMAC – which should improve sales in the depressed US market (Detroit News)• Chrysler is being lambasted for taking out full-page adverts in the American national press thanking the nation for supporting its auto industry. But critics point out this is a fresh waste of bail-out resources, as pages in the Wall Street Journal – one of the titles in which the ad ran – reportedly cost up to $264,000.