Wix 33595 Fuel Filter Duralast Ff686dl Fits Ford And Jaguar on 2040-parts.com
Fort Lauderdale, Florida, United States
Fuel Filters for Sale
- Wix 33958 fuel filter napa 3958(US $24.90)
- Wix 33187 fuel filter(US $30.00)
- Acdelco pro gf652 fuel filter(US $14.75)
- Edelbrock fuel filter assembly 0.125 in. npt female inlet/outlet(US $42.44)
- Wix 33442 - spin-on fuel/water separator with open end bottom(US $21.75)
- Wix 33192 fuel filter clark/melroe 753 bobcat loader.(w/drain) (14 micron)(US $18.89)
The Detroit motor show 2010 review, by Gavin Green
Tue, 12 Jan 2010Motown may not have rediscovered its mojo but at least the car makers formerly known as the Big Three have regained a little bit of their old swagger since the misery of last year’s Detroit show. After all, it’s not every year that two out of three national car makers go bankrupt. The survivor, Ford, unsurprisingly looked the most confident at this year’s show, never mind that its star car was about as hometown as Bauhaus and bratwurst.
The Manx makes it!
Tue, 20 May 2014After 1,300 miles, 96 hours, two engines, three transmissions, a busted exhaust, a bent shifter, a stuck throttle, countless bottles of water, much swearing and the looming threat of heat exhaustion, Bruce Meyers and the Meyers Manx Race Team buggy drove through the finish line at the town square of San Jose Del Cabo and completed the damn 2014 NORRA Mexican 1000 once and for all. Finally -- for Meyers' and the number 1964 buggy's first time -- they had successfully navigated the Baja Peninsula and finished under their own power. The poor Meyers Manx Dual Sport was looking worse for the wear when it streamed into town at 5:30 p.m.
Book captures Ford's Farley launching F-bomb at GM
Fri, 22 Jul 2011A new book about the Detroit auto industry rebuilding itself is showing that old rivalries are still alive and kicking in the Motor City. In Once Upon a Car by Bill Vlasic, Ford Motor Co.'s marketing chief lobs an F-bomb at General Motors. "We're going to beat on them, and it's going to be fun," the book quotes Jim Farley, Ford's group vice president of global marketing, sales and service, as saying.