Genuine Cummins Onan 0185-5458 Thermostat 0185-2238 Gasket Oem on 2040-parts.com
Other for Sale
Livewell timer module 2 1/16" x 1 5/16" red marine boat(US $24.95)
Oem johnson evinrude omc junction box and wiring harness solenoid vintage 60-70(US $250.00)
Replaces mercury quicksilver 549423 ac vintage tachometer 12v rpm hundreds(US $112.55)
Omc ignition key 53 501803(US $6.95)
1986 evinrude 60 hp front latch handle 0396606(US $19.99)
N12c mercury quicksilver 69542 reverse locking cam oem new factory boat parts(US $15.09)
Concept Car of the Week: Nissan NX-21 (1983)
Fri, 01 Aug 2014In the early 1980s, with the new millennium still seemingly an age away, Nissan Design America was tasked with imagining the family car of the future, while giving potential buyers a preview of the forthcoming N13 NX and EXA models. The resulting concept would be shown at the Tokyo motor show in 1983. Given confidence by the increasing success and expanding global presence of Japanese cars, including the previous generation N12 NX, Nissan's designers, led by Tom Semple, decided that the NX-21 (for 21st century) was the answer.
Ralliart unit folds, but Mitsubishi keeps name
Thu, 11 Mar 2010Mitsubishi will continue using the “Ralliart” brand name despite the demise of the Japanese racing parts company this week. Ralliart Inc., a wholly owned Japanese subsidiary of Mitsubishi Motors Corp., informed global distributors on Wednesday that it would cease business operations March 31. In the United States and Europe, Mitsubishi markets a Ralliart sports version of its Lancer, which has become a sporty halo car for the brand.
Mazda sells 10 millionth car in America
Wed, 23 Oct 2013The first car Mazda ever sold in America was the R100, a cute lil' two-door fastback that was, unsurprisingly, rotary-powered. The year was 1970. Iggy Pop had made that much explicitly clear with "1970." Just imagine how weird it must have been for Americans to wrap their minds around some tiny Japanese upstart, selling a car approximately the size of a 1970 Cadillac Fleetwood Brougham's wheelwell, powered by -- what's this, German technology?



