Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Buyers Products B2351002, Outrigger Bracket For Ductile Iron Outrigger (b23510) on 2040-parts.com

US $17.65
Location:

Chattanooga, Tennessee, United States

Chattanooga, Tennessee, United States
Condition:New Brand:Buyers Products Part Brand:Buyers Products Manufacturer Part Number:B2351002

Buyers Products B2351002, Outrigger Bracket for Ductile Iron Outrigger (B23510)

  • Manufacturer - Buyers Products Company
  • Part # -B2351002
  • Description - Outrigger Bracket for Ductile Iron Outrigger B23510 (2 Required)
  • Weight - 1.70 LBS
  • Welds to the Web of the Beam


Brand New Item. Ships from:
Cherokee Truck Equipment
2308 Gifford Street
Chattanooga, TN 37408.

Call (800) 365-7189, Option 1 for additional info.

 

Toyota says software glitch in data boxes can give faulty speed readings

Tue, 14 Sep 2010

A top Toyota executive says the crash data boxes in its vehicles are reliable but a bug in the software that reads the information can provide inaccurate vehicle speeds. The disclosure comes as the National Highway Transportation Safety Administration continues its investigation into unintended acceleration of Toyota models. “Toyota has acknowledged previously that the event data recorders are not accurate,” said Takeshi Uchiyamada, executive vice president in charge of research and development.

Concept Car of the Week: Alfa Romeo Navajo (1976)

Fri, 25 Jul 2014

In 1976, the space shuttle Enterprise was unveiled, Concorde made its first commercial flight and the Cray supercomputer went into service. These events represent a time when ideas transitioned from science fiction to reality. While significant progress was being demonstrated elsewhere, the motoring world gave us the first Ford Fiesta.

New cars will now NOT be getting any bigger!

Mon, 18 Nov 2013

A Vauxhall executive has made a bold statement – from now on, cars are not going to get any bigger. General vehicle dimensions across each sector of car are roughly now set to be fixed. “You can put a pin in a chart now,” explained the firm’s marketing director Stuart Harris.