Jaguar Front Seat, Reclining, 1960s, Mark 2 on 2040-parts.com
Denver, Colorado, United States
|
Front seat for 1960s Jaguar Mark 2. Reclining type. No bottom cushion. Leather is reasonably supple, but with a
couple of flaws and tears. Wood
flip-down tray in good-excellent condition (no warping or staining; 50-year-old varnish
just beginning to flake off cleanly). Recliner
and slider mechanisms both in fundamentally good condition (work fine) just
need a good clean and lube. Any rust or
corrosion purely surficial. Denver
pickup encouraged, but will ship for actual cost. |
Seats for Sale
Original gm chevy 2-frontt 2-shoulder light tan 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 ai(US $125.00)
Original gm chevy 3-ft 3-bk 2-sh-no bkls deluxe seat belts 67 68 69 70 71 72 aj(US $275.00)
1955-1957 chevrolet station wagon interior rear lower seat hinge bracket set(US $59.99)
1969 buick riviera power bucket seats(US $500.00)
Ww2 military vehicle white halftrack, m3a1 scout car drivers seat adj. bracket
1966 ford fairlane gt xl seat emblems
Nissan sales rise, Infiniti drops in April
Tue, 03 May 2011Sales of Nissan brand cars rose in April, but the Infiniti luxury division posted a decline for the month. Nissan-division sales were 64,765 units in April, up 14.5 percent compared with a year ago. For the year to date, Nissan sales are up 23.4 percent.
GM China opens Advanced Design Center in Shanghai
Wed, 19 Dec 2012General Motors China has opened a new advanced design studio as part of the establishment of its Advanced Technical Center in Shanghai. The Advanced Design Center will provide GM China's designers the tools to explore future mobility solutions and technology integration on a local and global scale. "Our new Advanced Design Center in Shanghai is part of the GM Global Design Center network, which webs from California to Germany to India and Korea and points beyond," said Wulin Gaowa, design director of the GM China Advanced Design Center.
One Lap of the Web: The Talented Mr. Honda, electric airplanes and Viper-powered Jensens
Mon, 24 Jun 2013We spend a lot of time on the Internet -- pretty much whenever we're not driving, writing about or working on cars. Since there's more out there than we'd ever be able to cover, here's our daily digest of car stuff on the Web you may not otherwise have heard about. -- A blog post at Hemmings called our attention to this fascinating profile of Soichiro Honda, which was originally printed in the June 16, 1963 edition of the British newspaper The Observer.
