Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

1967-1969 Camaro 1968-1972 Nova Small Block Engine To Frame Mounts Pair Lh + Rh on 2040-parts.com

US $35.00
Location:

Salinas, California, United States

Salinas, California, United States
Condition:Used Warranty:No

UP FOR AUCTION IS THIS PAIR OF 1967-1969 CAMARO MOTOR MOUNTS. THESE CAME OUT OF A 1969 CAMARO AND LOOK TO BE IN VERY GOOD CONDITION, JUST NEED SOME CLEANING.

Mecum to auction last Mitsubishi Eclipse for earthquake relief

Thu, 01 Sep 2011

The 22-year run of the sporty Mitsubishi Eclipse is over. To commemorate the occasion and honor the nameplate, the company is auctioning off the last car built, a 3.8-liter V6 SE coupe. The only coupe ever built in SE trim will cross the block during the annual St.

Video: Jaguar's Julian Thomson on the importance of design values

Tue, 30 Oct 2012

Jaguar's Head of Advanced Design, Julian Thomson, appeared at this month's PSFK Conference in London giving a talk on design values. Thomson's talk, ‘Concepting Dreams, Making Reality Happen', dealt with questions of creating a design story as well as how Jaguar uses the value of its heritage while keeping things original and new. Thomson – the man behind the 2010 C-X75 and the recently revealed F-Type – said, "You can't get a good design story if you don't look at your heritage, where you came from, where your values came from." He went on to discuss the ‘sad years of Jaguar', from around 1968 to 2004 where Jaguar was too timid to develop and "essentially made the same-looking car." He put this down to a reluctance on Jaguar's part to move too far away from its successful models and, quite interestingly, because "not only did we start doing market research, we started asking Americans what they wanted." Watch the full video on the left.

Jaguar X-type refreshed for 2007

Fri, 12 Oct 2007

By Tim Pollard First Official Pictures 12 October 2007 09:03 Jaguar X-type for 2008: the lowdown Jaguar has finally given the X-type a facelift, but the 500 changes try their hardest to escape your attention. On paper at least. It's small wonder that we did a double take when we scooped the new X earlier this year; some said we'd just caught the current car on test, but it turns out we were right.