Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Vintage Delco Starter Switch Auto Farm Industrial Rare ? on 2040-parts.com

US $30.00
Location:

Elmwood Park, Illinois, United States

Elmwood Park, Illinois, United States
Condition:New other (see details) Brand:Delco Manufacturer Part Number:unknown

Offered is a rare Delco starter switch without identification. This has a short body that measures approx 1-1/2 inches, and is about 7/8 inches wide. Item differs from most other Delco switches of this type, as the seam in the body is on the opposite side of the mounting hole. Item is very nice, comes as shown.

Starter Parts for Sale

Heuliez concept collection up for auction

Thu, 05 Jul 2012

A collection of coachbuilt specials and concept cars by French company Heuliez is to be sold at auction. The selection of 56 cars spans a huge spectrum from a Fiat 500 up to Le Mans racers but what really caught our eye were the oddball one-off conversions. Highlights include the Citroën BX Break De Chasse ‘Dyana', a three-door shooting break version of Gandini's classic, the 1972 Peugeot 204 Taxi H4 and the targa-roofed Citroën SM Espace.

Audi A3 Clubsport Quattro concept (2014) first official pictures

Thu, 15 May 2014

By Damion Smy First Official Pictures 15 May 2014 17:08 Audi has fired another salvo in the German power war with this: the 518bhp Audi A3 Clubsport Quattro concept. To be shown at the annual Worthersee show (which starts in Austria this week) the concept uses the 2.5-litre five-cylinder from the Audi TT RS and RS Q3 SUV. Officially, to show the A3’s ‘sportiness’, but it points to an RS3 saloon (we've already spied the hatch testing) as well as the next TT RS, which sits on the same platform.

May sales slide 4 percent on rising fuel prices, tight vehicle supplies

Wed, 01 Jun 2011

U.S. light vehicle sales dropped 4 percent in May--the first decline since August--as rising gas prices, inventory shortages, higher stickers and economic jitters curbed demand. The pace of sales last month--11.78 million units on an annualized basis--was the year's lowest and marked the first seasonally adjusted total below 12 million units in seven months.