
Most of the time, you don’t find much in the way of usable parts on a vehicle that went up in flames, but that doesn’t stop wrecking yards from making a go at selling a few parts before the Crusher eats the burn victim. Here’s a Vietnam Era military Jeep truck that may have a few salvageable bits and pieces. (Read More…)
Categories:
Recent Comments
Flybrian - Let’s fill ‘Studios’ with multiple 500 iterations nobody wants and dump a well-known volume seller....
Mark Morrison - Looks like the Merc was in Fisker trim
Kookie2 - Can’t do it. Need a hand to hold over one eye.
Mark Morrison - No but he was Triple F (Fair F***kn Flying) when he hit that tree by the look of it
geozinger - If the 500L is a bigger 500, that would put it roughly in the same size category as the original Chrysler minivans. As I loved those vans for their size and...
Hummer - Actually tonycd H2s were made by AM General, and that facility was reutilized almost instantly. Not all
NoGoYo - What year was the Toronado? I rather like the 79-85 Toronado, even if I prefer the Riviera of the same vintage.
highdesertcat - I was an Olds fan. What signifies an Oldsmobile for me was the brand new 1972 Olds Custom Cruiser Stationwagon we bought to take overseas to...
philipbarrett - It’s also cost savings. Knobs & buttons require physical components and wiring. Touch screens require only the part itself & code.
E46M3_333 - +1 These are marketing gimmicks for the most part. “Look, our dash looks and works like an iPad! Ipads are cool, therefore, our car is cool.” In a...