Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

1971-? Datsun Bluebird Left Rear Side Marker Light Iki P1a-71-5014 - Imp122 on 2040-parts.com

Location:

Thomasville, Pennsylvania, United States

Thomasville, Pennsylvania, United States
Excellent driver quality
Brand:IKi Manufacturer Part Number:P1A-71-5014



  • 1971-? Datsun Bluebird Left Rear Side Marker Light
  • Used
  • Unsure of exact year application
  • No cracks or chips in plastic lens
  • No dents in stainless bezel
  • Housing is intact
  • Includes mounting screws
  • Excellent driver quality
 


CAR’s £1000 support for upcoming journalists – in honour of Phil Llewellin

Mon, 19 Aug 2013

The Phil Llewellin Student Journalist of the Year award will go to the best student writer from the motoring journalism courses at Coventry and Cardiff Universities. The winner receives £1000 and also a work experience placement at CAR magazine, whose pages were graced by Phil Llewellin’s work until his untimely death in 2005. Entries for the award, run by the Guild of Motoring Writers, must be received by 30 September, with the winner announced at the RAC Club in London on 5 December.

Porsche reveals Panamera Turbo S

Fri, 01 Nov 2013

PORSCHE has taken the wraps off its new Panamera Turbo S, built for those who think the regular Turbo is neither fast nor exclusive enough. Prices will start at more than £131,000 for the car, which uses a twin-turbocharged 562bhp V8 petrol engine and four-wheel drive to catapult its two-tonne bulk to 62mph in just 3.8 seconds, on the way to a top speed of 192mph. Fuel economy is recorded as 27.7mpg on the European standard ‘combined cycle’ average, but drivers in the real world should expect around 20.

Survey reveals in-car climate clashes

Wed, 20 Aug 2014

CLIMATE change isn’t just leading to arguments in politics – it’s causing heat in cars, too, because it seems men and women simply can’t agree on what temperature to set. A new study from Kwik Fit has revealed that 52% of couples whose cars have air conditioning argue over what temperature to set it at, and it’s usually men who want it cooler than their female companions. And as many as 250,000 drivers across the country say their air-con preferences are so different to their partner’s that they simply have to keep the system turned off to avoid bust-ups.