Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

59 Ford Back Up Lenses Reverse Fairlane Galaxie Skyliner on 2040-parts.com

US $49.95
Location:

Signal Hill, California, US

Signal Hill, California, US
Item must be returned within:30 Days Refund will be given as:Money Back Return shipping will be paid by:Seller Restocking Fee:No Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Return policy details: Manufacturer Part Number:B9A-15514-A

 Pair of reproduction back up lenses.
59 Ford-all models

  • All items fully guaranteed, in stock and ready to ship
  • Combined shipping on multiple item purchases
  • For multiple item purchases, please "request a total from buyer" before paying
  • California residents pay 7 1/2 % sales tax
  • Los Angeles County residents pay 9 % sales tax
  • Please see my other listings for more Ford & Mercury parts and accessories




Revealed: the best and worst places to commute by car

Mon, 09 Jun 2014

Newspress Fed up with sitting in traffic on your rush hour commute? Then consider a move to Peterborough – where a survey has found the average commute is faster than any other city in the UK. Direct Line Drive Plus found that the average speed in Peterborough’s rush hour is 19.3mph – that’s almost double that of Westminster’s 10.06mph.

Driven: BMW i8

Thu, 17 Jul 2014

When BMW unveiled the Vision EfficientDynamics concept at the 2009 Frankfurt motor show, we wrote: "for our money, it's the first time a major carmaker has really attempted to communicate ‘green' technology in an aesthetic sense." Fast-forward five years and we've swapped the show halls of the IAA for a beauty spot on the north-west coast of Scotland. And, while the car's name has changed to i8, our sentiment towards this genre- and era-defining car remains. Admittedly the production car's design execution hasn't received the universal praise of its concept forebears, but, on a remote outpost of the British Isles, a Protonic Blue i8 couldn't look more exotic.

Motorcycle helmet integrates head-up display, GPS and rear-view camera

Mon, 18 Aug 2014

Silicon-Valley start-up Skully Systems will ship its 'world's smartest' motorcycle helmet from next year. It costs $1,399, and draws together a host of technology features that are already becoming familiar to car drivers and makes them available to motorcyclists for the first time. The helmet's visor features the firm's 'Synapse' see-through head-up display system that shows information like navigation data, bike speed, and a 180-degree angle feed from the rear-view camera mounted on the back of the helmet.