Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Standard Cpa361 - Carburetor Choke Pull Off on 2040-parts.com

US $18.95
Location:

Fort Mill, South Carolina, United States

Fort Mill, South Carolina, United States
Condition:New other (see details) Brand:Standard Motor Products Manufacturer Part Number:CPA361

Item: Carburetor choke pull off.

Reference number: CPA361.

Fits: Please consult the compatibility chart and make sure to hover over the "Important Part Details" section. If you have any doubts about it fitting your application, please contact us (the Ask a Question link is just below).

Please contact us (the Ask a Question link is just below) if you have any other questions.

Lamborghini Urus: Now it’s official

Sun, 22 Apr 2012

Lamborghini Urus - now it's official The Lamborghini Urus – Lambo’s new SUV – has been officially revealed at the Beijing Motor Show. On Friday we brought you all there is to know on the Lamborghini Urus – Lamborghini’s first SUV in a generation – with lots of detail and a gallery of photos. Now, Lamborghini has had the official reveal so we’re able to bring you all the detail they’ve delivered and all the photos they’ve released.

Vaxhall Insignia ecoFLEX Sports Tourer – Details

Mon, 24 Aug 2009

Vauxhall has released details of the Insignia Sports Tourer ecoFLEX But performance is not quite the Holy Grail it once was for car makers. Times are more constrained, and more headlines get attached to the ‘Eco’ versions than the performance versions. So when Vauxhall announced the Insignia ecoFLEX back in April, it got as many – if not more – column inches as the Insignia VXR did (if not with quite the passion!).

Porsche 911 buyers flock to rare 24-month leases

Mon, 28 Mar 2011

Porsche is pushing 24-month leases for its 911 and is running a six-month lease pull-ahead incentive on all of its sports cars to offset a shortage of low-mileage used cars. This year, 22 percent of all 911 lessees have taken 24-month contracts rather than 36-month deals, says Michael Bartsch, COO of Porsche Cars North America. That compares with 10 percent before the push.