Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Omc Part #321028 Gasket Cylinder Hd Cv, Cross Sierra 47-2544 on 2040-parts.com

US $4.50
Location:

Erie, Colorado, United States

Erie, Colorado, United States
Condition:New Brand:OMC

We only accept Paypal, and payments need to be made within 24 hours of purchase. We will send the part within 48 hours of payment. 

We do not accept returns, all items are as is, and sold as new to the best of our knowledge. All of these parts are in their original packaging, and is an original OMC/BRP part.

Ford B-MAX off to a strong start in UK

Tue, 13 Nov 2012

The new Ford B-Max compact people carrier is off to a strong sales start in the UK, with 1,000 already delivered to customers. And that eye-catching advert (we’ve posted it below – Ford in Europe need all the help they can get to garner sales!) will no doubt raise awareness of the long-awaited replacement for the old Fiesta-based Fusion MPV and help make the B-Max a success for Ford in a segment they once dominated, but which they’d left to wither on the vine. But eye-catching  advert for the new B-Max or not, the B-Max is already selling well with over 1,000 cars delivered to customers in the last few weeks and orders for 2500 cars received by Ford in the UK before the B-Max even appeared in showrooms.

Driven: Range Rover Evoque

Tue, 11 Oct 2011

As Sam Livingstone opines in his review of the latest Porsche 911, we are in a period of car design consolidation, with the new 911 the ultimate expression of a slightly suffocating trend. Yet every so often, a vehicle appears that breaks these rules and – through a combination of factors that can be difficult to quantify – captures the imagination, becoming a symbol of the times and an overnight market success. Such vehicles tend to emerge once a decade or so, yet the late 90s and early noughties were extraordinary for giving birth to three – the Ford Ka of '96, Audi TT of '98 and Mini of '01.

BMW makes a printing press out of an M6

Mon, 19 Nov 2012

While you're invariably reading this piece on some manner of digital device, Autoweek's roots lie in a physical magazine printed on an offset press. Hell, Competition Press was our original name. But as with any other old-media organization even cursorily concerned with relevance, we've made the leap into the digital world.