Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

1995 Seadoo Spx 650 * * Flywheel Guard * * P# 272 000 034 * * Used Jet Ski Part on 2040-parts.com

US $13.95
Location:

Reddick, Illinois, United States

Reddick, Illinois, United States
Used, no broken tabs.
Brand:Seadoo UPC:Does not apply

Up for auction is this used jet ski part.
This is the used flywheel guard removed from a 1995 Seadoo SPX 650cc jet ski.
Please see photos for condition - condition is as shown.
No broken tabs or cracks.
I currently have many parts listed from this machine.

Thanks for looking.

News watch July 2010: today's auto industry news

Sun, 25 Jul 2010

Welcome to CAR Magazine's news aggregator as we round up the daily stories in the auto industry. Top tip: news summaries are added from the top hour-by-hour Friday 30 July 2010• Renault has reported a net income of €823 million – with an operating margin of 4% and sales up 22% globally. Its worldwide market share now stands a whisker up at 3.8% (Renault)• La Regie said its business was performing much better than during the same period last year, when the recession bit into its profits.

Jaguar shuffles executives as it goes for growth (2013)

Tue, 02 Jul 2013

Jaguar-Land Rover has a new engineering boss and product delivery enforcer, as it gears up for an unprecedented new model push. Announced today and effective from 1 August 2013, Dr Wolfgang Ziebart becomes group engineering director, replacing Bob Joyce who moves into the new role of product creation and delivery director. Ziebart worked in R&D at BMW for 23 years, before moving onto key suppliers Continental and semi-conductor maker Infineon.

Into the Breach: The future of in-car infotainment

Tue, 07 May 2013

In-car infotainment is broken. The best that can be said of the finest systems on the market is that they generally do what one asks of them and don't induce fits of rage. At their worst, they're actively dangerous, spiking the driver's blood pressure, forcing tentative or aggressive behavior at intersections and interchanges—and generally taking the driver outside the flow of traffic.