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1955-59 Chevy & Gmc Truck Throttle Cable With Black Knob & Cable on 2040-parts.com

US $24.00
Location:

Hendersonville, North Carolina, United States

Hendersonville, North Carolina, United States
Condition:New

THIS IS THE THROTTLE CABLE WITH THE BLACK KNOB. IT IS NEW IN THE WRAPPER. VERY NICE REPRODUCTION. NEW CONDITION.

Ferrari F70: New Enzo officially teased

Sat, 15 Dec 2012

Ferrari has revealed the first tease photos of the new Enzo (F70 / F150) in the Ferrari Magazine ahead of its reveal. We know what the front of the new Ferrari Enzo looks like thanks to photo sneaked at a private presentation for the Ferrari faithful recently, and we’ve seen the F70 on video, albeit camouflaged. But now we know what the back end of the F70 looks like thanks to a teaser photo on the latest edition of the Ferrari Magazine.

Ian Callum meets graffiti artist Mr Kaves and his one-off Jag [w/video]

Mon, 16 Apr 2012

A backstreet garage in Brooklyn, New York, is home to the company that preps Jaguars and Land Rovers for films and TV product placement. Hidden in the rear is a full-sized Thomas the Tank Engine, the presence of which no one can explain. Nearer the front is an XKR, delivered a couple of days ago for a unique paint job.

UK's emergency Budget 2010: how it affects motorists

Mon, 21 Jun 2010

Chancellor George Osborne will make the emergency spending cuts on Tuesday 22 June By Tim Pollard Motoring Issues 21 June 2010 09:51 The new UK Government's emergency Budget tomorrow is likely to announce a raft of spending cuts and tax rises bound to affect motorists.  The new Conservative-Liberal coalition government is taking the unusual step of holding an emergency summer Budget to reduce the national deficit, which stood at £156bn in 2009-10. The senior Cabinet members signed off the details of the Budget on Friday, but the details won't be confirmed until Tuesday 22 June 2010.Here's our preview of what to expect if you're a car owner:VAT riseMost pundits agree that the rate of value added tax will rise from today's 17.5%. If raised to 20% – the upper limit expected – it could raise an extra £11 billion a year for Government coffers.