Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Yamaha V Max 600 1996 Speedometer Cable on 2040-parts.com

US $15.00
Location:

Saint Charles, Illinois, United States

Saint Charles, Illinois, United States
Condition:Used UPC:Does Not Apply

Yamaha V Max 600 1996 Speedometer Cable

Up For Sale is a used Speedometer Cable in good working condition. This item is from a Yamaha V Max 600 1996.

Please don't hesitate to ask questions. We will do our best to help. We try to respond ask quickly as possible usually within 24 to 48 hours.
You may be interested in our other eBay listings.



We sell used parts, all parts will show signs of use. Please study the picture carefully to make sure you know what your buying. If there's a problem with your purchase please contact us before leaving negative feedback. If we made a mistake, please give us the opportunity to make it right! Please note the flat rate shipping cost you see is for the continental US only. It will cost more to ship to Puerto Rico, Hawaii, and Alaska

You may be interested in our other eBay listings.

Modified Mercedes turned to gold

Mon, 10 Mar 2014

GERMAN tuning firms are known for occasionally crossing the barriers of taste, but this latest offering from Carlsson appears to have gone into new territory. Called the CS50 Versailles – after the Palace of Versailles that King Louis XIV turned into a opulent chateau – it’s based on the latest generation Mercedes-Benz S-Class, which is hardly a car short on luxury. But that hasn’t stopped Carlsson turning it into an automotive homage to gold.

The UK's most vandalised car is BMW's X5

Wed, 21 Aug 2013

BMW X5 buyers beware: you own the UK's most vandalised car. The big BMW has long been a fixture in the top 10 – 7th in 2011, 4th in 2012 – but now it has risen to the top of the table that summarises a nastier side of our society. The data is collected from swiftcover.com's annual Vehicle Vandalism Index, and this year's results highlight a dramatic shift in the type of vehicles listed in the top 10.

Cars of the future could be powered by seawater

Fri, 18 Apr 2014

Water from the sea could power cars of the future, if experiments currently being trialled by the US Navy prove to be successful. According to Jalopnik, the US Naval Research Laboratory is turning carbon dioxide from seawater into hydrogen, with the hope of fuelling its jets from alternative sources. Hydrogen cars ‘on sale next year’ Zero-emissions hydrogen fuel-cell cars on sale in 2015 – Hyundai If successful, researchers predict it’ll cost between $3 and $6 per gallon – that’s approximately 40p to 80p per litre.