Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Alfa Romeo 147 Original Rear Script Emblem New on 2040-parts.com

US $23.80
Location:

Zuid-Beijerland, NL

Zuid-Beijerland, NL
Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Item must be returned within:14 Days Refund will be given as:Money Back Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Return policy details: Restocking Fee:No

 
AutoMobilia.nl
Alfa Romeo 147
ORIGINAL REAR SCRIPT EMBLEM





Authentic Alfa Romeo - no reproduction! New. (070221)







 
 

Listing created with eLister 2.5.3r1 for Macintosh from Black Magik Software.


SquareTrade © AP6.0
Building Trust in Transactions (tm)     Building Trust in Transactions (tm)

UK car owners 'buy with their heart, not their head'

Tue, 15 Jul 2014

CAR BUYERS in the UK are an emotional lot and more let their heart decide which car they will buy rather than their head. Even drivers who think they make a decision using their head are often found to let more emotive considerations sway their final choice. In the Hiscox Head versus Heart study, common sense factors such as fuel economy, value for money and reliability are often over-ruled by heartfelt matters including comfort, speed and design.

World's most expensive Alfa Romeo sold at auction

Wed, 18 Sep 2013

The Alfa Romeo that was the brainchild of Mussolini has sold for nearly £6m at auction. The Italian dictator commissioned the Alfa Romeo 8C-35 to conquer Hitler's dominance of pre-war racing. Built in time for the 1935 Italian Grand Prix, the 8C-35 smashed the competition with racing star Tazio Nuvolari at the wheel and confirmed its fate as one of the most successful racing cars ever. At last weekend's Goodwood Revival, the 8C-35's place in the history books was confirmed as it became the most expensive Alfa Romeo ever to sell at auction. Selling for £5,937,500, the Alfa Romeo eclipsed the previous record of £4,245,118, held by a 1933 8C 2300 Monza, sold in 2010.

BMW 135i CSL – or something quick?

Wed, 14 Apr 2010

The powerful BMW 1-Series spotted at the Nurburgring We’ve had endless speculation that BMW are to produce an ‘M’ car for their baby 1-Series range. An argument for which is very strong. After all, if you can attach the ‘M’ moniker to a pair of fat SUVs – the X5M and X6M – attaching the ‘M’ badge to the 1-Series seems a no-brainer.