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  2. Keep Your Whip Pristine With These Car Covers for ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/9-best-car-covers-protecting...

    The original author of this story, Talon Homer, has been an auto journalist for the past five years and has tested a variety of vehicles and automotive products, car covers included.

  3. List of auto parts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_auto_parts

    This is a list of auto parts, which are manufactured components of automobiles. This list reflects both fossil-fueled cars (using internal combustion engines) and electric vehicles; the list is not exhaustive. Many of these parts are also used on other motor vehicles such as trucks and buses.

  4. Sealskin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sealskin

    Ringed seal skin Anti-sealskin cartoon by J. M. Staniforth (1899). Sealskin is the skin of a seal. Seal skins have been used by the peoples of North America and northern Eurasia for millennia to make waterproof jackets and boots, and seal fur to make fur coats. Sailors used to have tobacco pouches made from sealskin. Canada, Greenland, Norway ...

  5. Devin Enterprises - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Devin_Enterprises

    Devin Enterprises was an American automotive manufacturer that operated from 1955 to 1964. Devin was mainly known for producing high quality fiberglass car bodies that were sold as kits, but they also produced automotive accessories as well as complete automobiles.

  6. Hubcap - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hubcap

    It also has the function of decorating the car. [2] A hubcap is technically a small cover over the center of the wheel, while a wheel cover is a decorative metal or plastic disk that snaps or bolts onto and covers the entire face of the wheel. [3] Cars with stamped steel wheels often use a full-wheel cover that conceals the entire wheel.

  7. Sheepskin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sheepskin

    The use of sheepskin seat covers in moving vehicles dates back centuries, [6] perhaps as long ago as the Bronze Age, when wagons and carriages were first used. The more sophisticated, tailor-made sheepskin car seat covers of the modern era have been popular in Europe for decades, and grew in great popularity in the United States in the mid 1970s.

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