Cadillac Deville/fleetwood Owners Manual, 1989, Auto Repair, Books, Automotive on 2040-parts.com
The Dalles, Oregon, US
1989 Cadillac DeVille/Fleetwood Owners Manual. Used but in GR8 condition. Great collectors item. No Rips, Tears or Chews. Thanks for Looking and Happy Bidding:)
Cadillac for Sale
- 1994 cadillac seville owners manual, instructions, safety, auto repair(US $5.75)
- 1967-1989 cadillac shop manual / 68 69 70 72 72 74 76 77 79 chilton's book(US $17.50)
- 1954 cadillac shop manual / good original base / main book for 1954 &1955(US $64.50)
- 1956 cadillac shop manual / shop book / good condition / nice original!!!(US $67.50)
- 1976-1981 cadillac parts catalog set / original text & illustrations books 77 79(US $112.50)
- 2001 cadillac deville owners manual(US $15.00)
Fiat at the Geneva Motor Show – Abarth Punto EVO
Thu, 25 Feb 2010The Abarth Punto EVO - Geneva bound Fiat’s hot Herberts – Abarth – don’t just have the Abarth 500C Convertible to stick on their stand at Geneva, they also have a tweaked and sorted Punto EVO – the Abarth Punto EVO – to get the attention of show-goers. The performance division of Fiat have stuck a bigger turbo on the Punto EVO which ups the output to 165bhp and drops the 0-60mph time to 7.7 seconds. But economy and emissions don’t seem to suffer with the EVO managing 47mpg and emissions of 142g/km.
Pagani Huayra: First real Huayra photo – EXCLUSIVE!
Fri, 21 Jan 2011Pagani Huayra First Photo Some of you may have seen the magazine scan over at Teamspeed earlier today showing the new Pagani Huayra. Many who have seen the scan have wondered if it is real. It is.
This could be your first autonomous vehicle
Thu, 09 Jan 2014While Google's autonomous fleet of robot cars prowls Silicon Valley and gets all the press, the first, or one of the first, truly autonomous vehicles you may ride in could be something like this: The humble, people-moving Navia. Developed by a French company called Induct, the Navia is ringed with laser beams (not frickin' laser beams. Ed.) that help it navigate through city streets or college campuses without the aid of a track in the ground, a rail or even GPS (GPS is not accurate enough, Induct says).