Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Willys Early Style Dipstick And Tube Slatgrill Mb Gpw Jeep on 2040-parts.com

Location:

La Grande, Oregon, United States

La Grande, Oregon, United States
Condition:Used

Early Willys Jeep Dipstick and Tube. I believe this is for a Slatgrill. 
It might also fit an early MB or GPW. 

I am definitely not an expert so please study the pictures for the best description.

Please ask any and all questions that you might have about this item before placing your bid.


I charge only actual cost for shipping and insurance.  Any over-charge resulting from eBay's shipping calculator error will be refunded via Paypal when the item is shipped.

Keywords: willys willy willies mb ford gpw g503 jeep jeeps slat grill slatt grille slatgrill military army ww2 wwii

Jaguar to handbuild new £1m E-type Lightweights (2014) first pictures

Wed, 14 May 2014

By Phil McNamara First Official Pictures 14 May 2014 09:16 Jaguar’s E-type is coming back from the dead, in ultra-rare ‘Lightweight’ form. A special team of craftsmen will handbuild six cars, all picture-perfect reproductions of the legendary Lightweight E-types from 1963-64. The 'new' cars are expected to sell for around £1 million each; established Jaguar collectors with a thirst for racing and a desire for a wondrous slice of motoring memorabilia get your name down now.

London hogging too much transport investment

Tue, 03 Jun 2014

THE UNDERFUNDING of transport projects outside London in recent years "cannot be allowed to continue", says a report from MPs. Ministers must use the new funding arrangements for local projects to "ensure that there is a fairer allocation of funding", said the report from the House of Commons Transport Committee. "No area across our nation should be second class in relation to the allocation of transport infrastructure funds," the MPs said.

Concept Car of the Week: Nissan NX-21 (1983)

Fri, 01 Aug 2014

In the early 1980s, with the new millennium still seemingly an age away, Nissan Design America was tasked with imagining the family car of the future, while giving potential buyers a preview of the forthcoming N13 NX and EXA models. The resulting concept would be shown at the Tokyo motor show in 1983. Given confidence by the increasing success and expanding global presence of Japanese cars, including the previous generation N12 NX, Nissan's designers, led by Tom Semple, decided that the NX-21 (for 21st century) was the answer.