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Omc Johnson Evinrude Zinc Anode Camp C 173 Free Shipping! We Ship World Wide! on 2040-parts.com

US $9.90
Location:

Stamford, Connecticut, United States

Stamford, Connecticut, United States
Condition:New Manufacturer Part Number:0 Country/Region of Manufacture:United States Brand:OMC JOHNSON EVINRUDE UPC:Does not apply

BRAND NEW IN ORIGINAL PACKAGE!   COMES WITH SCREWS AND WASHERS!  FREE SHIPPING IN THE US!   WE SHIP WORLD WIDE!  SHIPPING OUTSIDE OF US EXTRA .  LIQUIDATION OF OLDER INVENTORY

Reliant 'Rugged Robin' is ready for battle

Thu, 28 Jun 2012

The Reliant Robin has a loyal cult following that is characterized mainly by racing and funky paint jobs, but one man in England has taken the task of defending the Robin's honor to a whole new level. Bernard Reeves of East Sussex in the United Kingdom told the Daily Mail that he got fed up with Top Gear host Jeremy Clarkson's ridicule of the Robin, most notably in a film containing footage of Clarkson rolling a Robin multiple times before pushing it into a canal. If Reeves has a grudge against people who poke fun of Robins on a regular basis, we'd suspect that Mr.

Mercedes S-Class Convertible confirmed

Sun, 29 Sep 2013

The Mercedes S-Class Convertible will be based on the S-Class Coupe (pictured) The new Mercedes S-Class has already arrived, and we’ve also got the new S-Class Coupe (in concept form, at least) with the next variant of the new S-Class now looking likely to be the Mercedes S-Class Convertible. We’ve known since 2011 that Mercedes were planning to chop the top off the S-Class for the first time since the W111 S-Class in the 1960s, but this is the first time anyone from Mercedes has officially confirmed it. Thomas Weber, Mercedes’ product development boss, has told Automotive News that the S-Class Convertible is on the way and will be based on the new S-Class Coupe.

One Lap of the Web: Russian dash-cam ghost machines

Tue, 22 Apr 2014

-- Brace yourselves, people: "Dynamic" is not the only marketing buzzword of the moment. Now there's "velocity," which makes sense if you think of cars designed to move forward in some form or another. It actually refers to how fast an auto dealer can get you a cup of coffee, a pat on the back and a signature on the dotted line, as Lindsay Chappelle of Automotive News explains.