Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Aircraft Aviation Tools 10pc 3/16" Cleco (new) on 2040-parts.com

US $9.95
Location:

Elizabethtown, Kentucky, United States

Elizabethtown, Kentucky, United States
Condition:New Manufacturer Part Number:11014-10 Brand:Air Capital

10pc K-Series Spring Clecos 3/16"

Plier operated, spring loaded, plunger type temporary fasteners come in several different styles and sizes to suite a variety of applications. Clecos are color coded for easy identification.

The industry standard spring cleco with a 0-1/4" grip range.


We ship APO, FPO, and internationally. Buy 2 or more items and save on shipping.


Check out my other items!

Vauxhall VXR8 Tourer revealed: Price from £49,500

Thu, 28 Mar 2013

Vauxhall has revealed the Estate version of the VXR8 – the Vauxhall VXR8 Tourer – which offers oodles of room and 425bhp. That sort of power in an estate car certainly offers a different experience to regular load-luggers with 0-62mph coming up in a slightly silly 4.9 seconds. But, despite looking a bit past its prime even though it’s a new model, the VXR8 Tourer gets a reasonably sophisticated setup with McPherson Strut with progressive coils at the front and a multi-link setup at the back, launch control and a limited slip diff, all conspiring to try and put the VXR8 Tourer’s 425bhp power down through the rear wheels.

Parking wardens given ‘illegal’ bonus targets

Mon, 27 Jan 2014

Parking wardens are given ‘illegal’ bonuses based on the number of fines they dish out, according to an investigation by the BBC. Three London Councils are now being probed by Local Government Minister, Brandon Lewis, as a result of the BBC’s research. On Bing: see pictures of bad parking UK pays £30 million a month in parking fines Bromley Council’s parking firm Vinci reportedly paid wardens a bonus of £20 a ticket, with a target of 72,000 penalty charge notices – while Lambeth’s parking enforcement contractors NSL ‘requires’ 205,000 tickets to be issued a year.

Volvo develops new energy storage technology

Thu, 17 Oct 2013

Volvo is looking to make heavy batteries in electric vehicles a thing of the past, unveiling a new technology still under development that could use the body panels of the vehicle to store energy. Everyone knows that right now one of the biggest technological limiting factors of electric vehicles are the batteries. They can be damaged through depletion, they add weight, they use expensive and polluting technologies to manufacture, and they just don't hold as much energy as we'd like.