Lotus 7 Locost Seven Windshield Frame on 2040-parts.com
Lawrenceville, Georgia, US
Windshield frame for Lotus 7 or Locost Seven - used in very good condition - looks like aluminum - 37 1/4 outside width, 36 " inside width, 19" total height with 12" height of glass opening.
Air Dams for Sale
914 flexdam rubber - have a 6 left, and i'm holding out 3 for the fiberglass (US $76.00)
Mass air flow sensor fit lexus 99-03 es300 99-03 rx300 01-05 gs300 04-05 es330(US $29.99)
07-11 honda civic si 4dr side under spoiler kit red oem(US $449.00)
1973 corvette reproduction front lower grills,(US $99.00)
New old stock nos 15938665 gm rear wheel house liner oem price reduced!(US $14.99)
Gm part 8736244 1968 firebird camero door hinge upper oe nos(US $115.00)
Mercedes AMG GT (almost) revealed
Wed, 11 Jun 2014The Mercedes AMG GT revealed with green and black camouflage As we expected, Mercedes is drawing out the tease for the reeval of the new AMG GT – effectively a replacement for the SLS – and milking every detail for more column inches. We’ve had a full reveal of the S-Class inspired interior – a full reveal, not just a few detail shots – and we’ve also had a tease of the AMG GT on video with a few blurry glimpses of the new car dotted throughout. We’ve even had a variation on the tease them with a selection of engine noises – from idle to high revs – but now we get a real photo of the AMG GT, albeit covered in lurid green and black camouflage swirls.
Volvo XC90 gets a facelift for 2012 – just
Thu, 08 Sep 20112012 Volvo XC90 Facelift - very minor tweaks The Volvo XC90 has been with us for the best part of a decade without any major changes, thanks mainly to Ford pulling the plug on a new XC90 a few years ago. But the outlook is much brighter since the Chinese took the reins at Volvo and we’re certain there’s a new XC90 ready to surface in 2012. But for now Volvo has decided to give the current XC90 a bit of a tweak to take it through to the launch of an all new model.
Car companies, community & a cause
Fri, 26 Apr 2013Last Saturday night (April 20) was one of those I-can't believe-I-get-paid-to-do-this kind of evenings. My wife Maria and I -- along with 550 of our closest friends -- were invited to attend the Barbara Ann Karmanos Cancer Institute's 31st annual dinner. The name sort of says it all, and the dinner is a simple enough concept that even I get it: It's held to raise money.

