Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Vintage Pair Of 1967 1969 1970-1979 Ford Truck Mirrors 1968-1977 Bronco on 2040-parts.com

Location:

Wichita, Kansas, United States

Wichita, Kansas, United States
good for daily drive,
Brand:FORD Warranty:No Interchange Part Number:1971 1972 1973 1974 1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 Country/Region of Manufacture:United States Placement on Vehicle:Left, Right Manufacturer Part Number:D3TB 17743 DA Surface Finish:CHROME

You are bidding on a pair of original used exterior mirrors for 1967-69 Ford trucks and 1968-77 Ford Bronco. Both mirrors have light surface scratches and small pitting and the mirror glasses have light scratches as well, still real good mirrors for daily drive. Please look at the pictures for condition and make sure these mirrors are right for you. PAYMENT IS EXPECTED WITHIN 5 DAYS OF WINNING BID DATE. Thank you for looking. 

Used '80s dream cars, an AW list

Fri, 12 Mar 2010

Ah, the '80s--the time of big hair, MTV and underpowered cars. The decade wasn't a total loss, though. You could find a few diamonds in the rough.

SAIC Roewe

Mon, 16 Oct 2006

By Ben Whitworth Motor Industry 16 October 2006 09:40 Rover lives on! This is Shanghai Automotive Industry Corporation’s Roewe 750E - the Rover 75-based saloon - caught here undisguised weeks ahead of its official unveiling at next month’s Beijing motor show. Under a shroud of secrecy the Roewe underwent an official naming ceremony last Friday in Shanghai.

BMW Roadster Concept: BMW Vision ConnectedDrive Geneva debut

Thu, 10 Feb 2011

BMW Vision ConnectedDrive We reported the other day that BMW were taking a roadster concept to the Geneva Motor Show, a car we expected to point the way to a new, smaller roadster – the BMW Z2. But it seems to be much more than just that. The BMW Vision ConnectedDrive – for that is the catchy little moniker BMW has attached to this concept – is a showcase for BMW technology and the layered styling language we’ve already seen in the Vision EfficientDynamics concept (can’t we have some snappy little monikers instead of Anglicising the German practice of just joining words together in a line to make a new word?).