1967–69 Vintage Ski-doo Olympique Snowmobile 299 Tail Light on 2040-parts.com
Syracuse, New York, United States
Body Parts for Sale
Starting line products tunnel extension 133/136in. 32-35(US $139.95)
Straightline performance 182-109-blue sport aluminum front bumper - blue(US $138.87)
Straightline performance 183-233-red bottom wing - red 183-233-red 0530-1487(US $77.10)
Vintage ski-doo olympique snowmobile 299 seat backrest plastic 1967 - 1969(US $225.00)
Straightline performance 182-120-red bottom wing - red 182-120-red 0530-1612(US $60.08)
Straightline performance bumper wing 182-120-white 182-120-white 0530-1611(US $82.12)
Ford design chief J Mays retires, replaced by Moray Callum
Tue, 05 Nov 2013J Mays, Ford Motor Co.'s global design chief and one of the last senior executives remaining from the Jacques Nasser era, is retiring from the company along with two other veteran senior executives. Moray Callum, 58, design director for Ford in North America, will replace Mays, 59, the automaker said in a statement today. Also retiring after long Ford careers are Jim Tetreault, 57, vice president of North American manufacturing, and Martin Mulloy, vice president of labor relations.
Vauxhall Monza concept (2013) the new high-tech coupe revealed
Wed, 21 Aug 2013Vauxhall will unveil its new Monza coupe concept at the Frankfurt motor show in September 2013, exactly 36 years after the original Monza was revealed at the very same event. This sleek new Vauxhall isn’t a retro throwback though – it sports a cutting-edge gas/electric powertrain that promises to be even more frugal than Vauxhall’s own 235mpg Ampera. So the new Monza shows the future of Vauxhall, does it?
White House pushes for Friday deal on fuel-economy regulations
Wed, 27 Jul 2011The White House wants to announce as early as Friday that it has reached agreement with most automakers on a plan to raise corporate average fuel economy targets to 54.5 mpg by 2025, manufacturers' representatives said Wednesday. While no automakers have signed on to the Obama administration plan yet, most--including Ford, Toyota, General Motors and Chrysler--are generally supportive and intend to do so, the industry officials said. Each manufacturer is trying to iron out technical issues with the White House before endorsing the proposal.















