Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Vw Karmann Ghia Logo Vintage Key Blank W62vb Nos on 2040-parts.com

US $14.99
Location:

united states, United States

united states, United States
Condition:New

Here we have a Volkswagon logo key blank that should work for for the 1956-1959 Beetle and Karmann Ghia. Ilco and Dominion W62VB blank. NOS. Other blanks that this keyblank will work for: V71E, V66P,1062VW, U62VW, 62VW, and V21.

SG series

Check the pictures and the numbers on your current key to make sure that they match. Take the keyblank to your local locksmith or hardware store to have the key cut. Any question, please ask.

No returns on cut keys.

This is a vintage key from the 70's. Not a look-alike replica from over the ocean.

Thanks for looking!

 

Volvo celebrates SCC's 10th anniversary

Fri, 22 Jul 2011

Volvo is celebrating the legacy of its Safety Concept Car 10 years after its release. The Volvo SCC, first unveiled at the 2001 Detroit auto show, contained around 15 of the advanced technical solutions still found in Volvo models today. The SCC also inspired the design of the successful Volvo C30 model, which debuted in Paris in 2006.

Germany plans to charge foreigners to drive on the Autobahn

Tue, 10 Dec 2013

Germany plans to charge foreigners to drive on the Autobahn It seems Germany is planning to charge to use the Autobahn network – just as France does – but it plans to levy the charge just on foreign visitors. The plan is part of a deal by Angela Merkel’s Social Democrat party to form a new coalition and would see all non-German drivers paying a fixed toll to use the Autobahns. But the plan is coming under fire from neighbouring countries (Germany has borders with nine other countries) and even from its own version of the AA – the ADAC – who say the revenue likely to be raised – around £220 million – will do little to address the costs.

Top Gear 'for inner nine-yea-old'

Tue, 28 Jan 2014

THE BOSS of BBC hit Top Gear says the presenters' childish antics are a success because they are a "release valve" for the increasing stresses of our working lives. Executive producer Andy Wilman said the programmes helped viewers to reconnect with their nine-year-old selves because life for adults is "bloody hard". In an interview with Radio Times, he also bemoaned the constraints of the workplace, which could be seen as a swipe at the strict levels of compliance which apply to BBC TV shows.