Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Ford Motor Magazin Motorcraft Shop Tips Vol.21,n°3 April 1983 Year 14 Pages on 2040-parts.com

US $0.99
Location:

Santiago, Region Metropolitana, CL

Santiago, Region Metropolitana, CL
Item must be returned within:14 Days Refund will be given as:Money Back Return policy details: Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Restocking Fee:No Country of Manufacture:United States COMPANY:FORD MOTOR COMPANY Nº FORM:COPYRIGHT 1983, FORD MOTOR COMPANY ARTICLE / TYPE:THE NEW GENERATION OF ELECTRONICS /MAGAZINE CONDITION BROCHURE:VERY GOOD CONDITION ORIGINAL / REPRODUCTION:ORIGINAL FORD CO SIZE / MEASURES:LETTER SIZE CREATION YEAR:1983 YEAR

Other for Sale

2013 Toyota Auris leaks

Wed, 30 May 2012

The next generation Toyota Auris (Toyota Corolla) is due to debut this year as a 2013 model, and we get the first leaked photo. We know that a replacement for the Toyota Auris is on the horizon and we’re expecting it to make a public debut (at least in Europe) at the Paris Motor Show in September before going on sale by the end of 2012. But now, thanks to a Japanese Magazine scan, we have a pretty good idea what Toyota’s new Auris/Corolla is going to look like, and it seems to be the current Auris with a dose of Lexus thrown in for good measure.

AutoStyle Design Competition 2010

Fri, 24 Sep 2010

Berman SpA, an OEM parts and genuine accessories designer and supplier, will hold the 7th edition of its AutoStyle Design Competition on October 14th and 15th in the company's home city of Mantua, Italy. Held in Polirone Abbey in San Benedetto Po, the two day workshop sets the stage for members of the automotive industry to evaluate and better understand the processes of research and experimentation in the creation and evolution of car models. It will give designers, vehicle technicians and design aficionados an opportunity see model advancement from four different perspectives.

Hongik University's transportation design process

Mon, 22 Jun 2009

Hongik University in Seoul, Korea, is one of the preeminent design schools in the country with a diverse range of programs. But the school's transportation design department has also developed a unique approach for concept ideation. At the International Transportation Design Forum in Pforzheim, Germany, Professor Joo Hyun Chung from the school's Transportation Design course gave Car Design News an exclusive insight into the process, explaining how students express their ideas into 3D surfaces directly, using materials such as paper and wire for the first exploration of the form rather than the traditional 2D to 3D process.