Ford Fe Oem Cylinder Head Bolt Set on 2040-parts.com
Brainerd, Minnesota, United States
|
ONE SET, 10 LONG & 10 SHORT, F. E. FORD HEAD BOLTS, USED. OUT OF 1967 390 C. I. MUSTANG. THEY FIT F. E. 332,352,360,390,410,427,428, ENGINES.
|
Cylinder Heads & Parts for Sale
Fel-pro es72161 stretch head bolt set(US $78.54)
Uro parts err7370 valve cover(US $8.13)
Fel-pro es72202 stretch head bolt set(US $20.30)
Bmw genuine engine cylinder head gasket (1.82 mm) e30(US $174.14)
Bmw genuine engine valve timing chain guide rail e12 e21 e23 e24 e28 e30 e32 e34(US $58.62)
Engine cylinder head bolt set fel-pro es 71177(US $32.14)
VW Golf GTI Excessive (2010): the maximum GTI
Sun, 16 May 2010By Tim Pollard First Official Pictures 16 May 2010 07:07 The Volkswagen Group has fallen in love with the Austrian hot hatchfest that is Wörthersee. Barely a year goes by when an outrageous Audi or VW isn't being wheeled out to Europe's GTi fans – and 2010 is no different. The new VW Golf GTI Excessive is not as extreme as its name suggests, but rather it's a gently tweaked-up version of one of the most rounded hot hatches on sale today.
Fiat 500 in New York
Sat, 06 Jun 2009The Fiat 500 on Wall Street - Image by AP Fiat has obviously taken a good look at what BMW has managed with the MINI and thought ‘We can do that’. After all, the Fiat 500 is a car very similar in concept to the MINI. Designed to evoke a motoring icon, but made very much 21st century in its execution, both the MINI and the Fiat 500 have gone down a storm in Europe.
Jaguar Land Rover sales drive Tata Motors’ profit
Tue, 14 Feb 2012JLR strong sales drive Tata Motors profits Jaguar Land Rover sales rose 41 per cent in the last quarter to £3.75 billion with profits of £440 million, propping up Tata’s domestic decline. When Tata bought Jaguar Land Rover from Ford back in 2008 for $2.3 billion it offered promise for the future, but most analysts thought Tata had made a big mistake buying JLR for so much, just as the world economy started to slip ion to the near depression we’re still fighting. But the analysts were wrong.
