Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Yamaha Vmax Motorcycle Metal Wall Clock Choice Of 4 Models 1999 2010 2013 V-max on 2040-parts.com

US $49.99
Location:

Albuquerque, New Mexico, US

Albuquerque, New Mexico, US
Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Refund will be given as:Money back or exchange (buyer's choice) Item must be returned within:14 Days Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Restocking Fee:No

This is a NEW 10" diameter brushed aluminum quartz wall clock featuring a choice of four different Yamaha V-Max motorcycles (see pictures). 

Clock has a glass lens and runs on one AA battery.

Dimensions 

Outside diameter: 10" (25cm)

Dial diameter: 8 3/4" ( 22cm)

Depth: 1 5/8" (3.8cm)

Please specify your model choice at the top of the page before you click on the Buy It Now button.

I sell mostly clocks.  Please check out my feedback to see what other buyers have said about my products and service.

Please note:  This is a PAY PAL ONLY auction.  In order to pay for this item, you must have a PAY PAL account. 

I only ship to the following countries: 

 

United States 

Canada

Australia

New Zealand

United Kingdom

Ireland

Germany

France

Norway

Sweden

Finland

Iceland

Denmark

Netherlands

Belgium

Luxembourg

Switzerland

Liechtenstein

Austria

Spain

Portugal

Andorra

Japan

Hong Kong

Singapore

Thailand

Malaysia

 


Powered by eBay Turbo Lister
The free listing tool. List your items fast and easy and manage your active items.

Hyundai joins the crossover set

Mon, 19 Feb 2007

By Tim Pollard First Official Pictures 19 February 2007 09:39 Yawn... not another crossover concept? Afraid so.

Ferrari 250 GTO sells for $35 million

Sat, 02 Jun 2012

A Ferrari 250 GTO – once owned by Sir Stirling Moss – is reported to have sold for a record-breaking $35 million. The Ferrari 250 GTO is probably the most coveted car on the planet and is, therefore, one of the most expensive. Simple supply and demand dictates that when a product is reckoned to be the best there is and the supply is limited prices will rise.

The no-show cars: a reader rant on mad concepts

Wed, 14 Apr 2010

Instigated by Harley Earl at General Motors in the late 30s with the quaintly named Buick Y-Job, show cars, or concept cars, were presented to an excited public eager for new things. As the world recovered from a depression and then a war, these vehicles pointed to a better future that many people believed in, including the people who produced them. And, although many of the concept cars of the 50s, with their Jetsons plexiglass roofs and notional nuclear powered engines seem ludicrous now, in their time they weren’t that cynical.