Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

New Steel Door Shell Complete Left 1952 1953 1954 (55 1st S) Chevrolet Gmc Truck on 2040-parts.com

US $425.00
Location:

Sanford, Florida, United States

Sanford, Florida, United States
Condition:New

Brand new steel door for your 1952-54 (also fits 1955 first series) Chevy or GMC truck. With all-new tooling these doors are exact fit to replace your rusty, rotted and kinked originals. Complete with correct inner structure for quick and easy installation of your original regulators, tracks, vent assemblies, glass, latches trim and covers. Finished in rust-proofing black e-coat finish inside and out. Just test fit, scuff, prime and paint!

Compare at $499+! These are the finest quality and best value you will find.

$175 if shipping to a commercial/business address OR $200 to a residential address. If you check out at $175 and your address is residential, we will invoice you for the remaining $25 prior to shipping.

Other for Sale

New Ferrari F12 Berlinetta unveiled UPDATED

Wed, 29 Feb 2012

Ferrari F12 Berlinetta is here It’s the new Ferrari F12 Berlinetta – not the F620 – but it is the replacement for the 599 and heading for a Geneva Debut. After leaks of images and photos of mock-ups what we thought would be called the F620 turns out to be the Ferrari F12 Berlinetta. Despite the name attached to the leaks of the new F12 being wrong, the photos were pretty much right.

Rolls Royce bucks the downturn

Sun, 30 Nov 2008

[ad#ad-1] All we seem to have written about recently is the doom and gloom in the car industry. Bail-outs begged for, production shut-downs, low sales and lay-offs. But one manufacturer seems to be defying the odds, and has just posted record sales figures for the year.

125th Anniversary of the Automobile: Karl Benz and Gottlieb Daimler put the world on wheels

Tue, 25 Jan 2011

The world will mark the 125th anniversary of the invention of the automobile on Jan. 29. Karl Benz filed a patent for a three-wheeled vehicle driven by a gasoline engine in Mannheim, Germany, on that day in 1886, the same year Gottlieb Daimler completed his motorized carriage in Cannstatt, Germany.