Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Alfa Romeo 1989 Owners Manual on 2040-parts.com

US $50.00
Location:

Decatur, Georgia, United States

Decatur, Georgia, United States
Condition:Used

Alfa Romeo 1989 Owners Manual
Near pristine condition
No tears or stains


Please look at pictures, we will be glad to provide additional photos upon request.

Email with specific questions, we answer quickly.

We sell as is, no returns.

Customs and import duties are the sole responsibility of the buyer and are not calculated by the seller.

USPS shipping within 24 hours upon Paypal acknowledgment of receipt of funds.

Purchases can be combined for shipping savings.

Check our other listings, we post new items all the time.

Good luck and thanks, we appreciate your business.

Festival of the Unexceptional: the bad cars we love

Mon, 28 Apr 2014

Ever been to a classic car show and noticed how many old MGBs and sports cars of yesteryear have turned up, driven by their proud owners, but wondered what happened to all the more mainstream stuff? There are twice as many Ferrari 308 GTBs on the roads in the UK than Austin Allegros, because the everyday cars of the past fail MOTs, get chucked away and replaced with shiny new hatchbacks. Fortunately, there is a select group of people in the UK who care for the mundane stuff of yesterday and, because of this, a new event for “unexceptional” cars will be taking place this summer.

2011 Ford F-150 powertrain lineup overhauled

Thu, 23 Sep 2010

WITH VIDEO -- A V6 in America's best-selling pickup? Ford enthusiasts know there has been a six-cylinder engine available in F-Series pickups most years since the truck's debut in 1948. But never has so much combustion efficiency been seen in any of them until now.

'Crash for cash' scams soar by 51%

Wed, 18 Jun 2014

THE NUMBER of "crash for cash" car insurance scams uncovered by a major insurer surged by 51% annually last year. Aviva said it had detected around 820 staged accidents in 2013, leading to some 2,200 fraudulent personal injury claims. It is pressing for tougher penalties and said that often, rather than being locked up, fraudsters end up being sentenced to community orders, which "do little" to deter them from re-offending.