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there was a factory recall on them 2 years ago on the 98s. you should check with your dealer
No, although you do have two choices. One can be P235/60R16 99S, the other is P235/55R17 98S. It is best to stick with the recommended sizes for your vehicle
Several arsenals manufactured them. Aside from Mauser Waffenfabrik, arsenals captured by the Germans in Belgium, Czechoslovakia, and Yugoslavia were used to manufactured Kar. 98s, as well.The main producer of the Mauser model K98Kwas Mauser Werke A.G. Oberndorf-am-Neckar.The second main producer was J.P.Sauer und Sohn Gewehrfabrik,Suhl.some otf the other main mauser rifle producers from 1934-1945 will be,Erfurter Maschienfabrik(Erma) in Erfurt,Mauser Werke,Berlin-Borsigwalde.Steyr-Damiler-Puch A.G. Steyr,Austria.In Belguim it was Fabrique-Nationale,In Czechoslovakia it was the firm BRNO.In Yugoslavia,it was the firm Zatslava.The total firms that made this rifle during World War II can fill 4 pages.
A Bank of England Ten Shilling note (Series C - red/brown)(Chief Cashier J.S. Fforde - serial 98S), uncirculated and in absolute mint condition could fetch anything up to £15 GBP. If it has been circulated but still in good condition, it might fetch anything from £2 to £7 GBP. A reputable coin dealer will be able to give a more accurate valuation.
There's no Lv.98 code, you use the Lv.99 code. If you could make Doom Seeds or just raise them, of course, then you'll get Lv.98s. Simple!
I am a used car wholesaler and although I do not know about a 2004 I have seen 98s-01s with 145k or more that the supercharger is still in great working condition so i feel it would be a safe purchase.
there are two fuse panels on the 98s. one is under the hood on the passenger side wheelwell and the second is also on the passenger side but this one is in the cab so to speak. as you open the passenger side door there is a small panel on the outside dash. take it off and there you will find more fuses. both lids should have fuse diagrams on them
The British used a multitude of weapons. Individual soldiers carried the Lee-Enfield .303 rifle, the Bren squad machine gun, the Thompson machine gun, and some varied pistols. The PIAT anti tank launcher and the Mills Grenade were also used.
98? or 98 custom? I don't think you can put one on the old 98s or the customs actually there might be a special made e-trigger for the 98 customs but the reason why I say you cant is because if you look at a 98 custom or 98's inside theres no where really for the whole trigger to come off whereas the A5 or X7 the entire trigger system comes off handel, trigger, firing modes, everything its basically half of the back part of the gun coming off
I had a 1971 Electra 225 that had 1 1971 taillight and 1 1972 taillight. It looked odd but it worked. The 1971 was the first of this body and thus 1972 had only detail changes, so a majority of 1971 parts should be a go. A lot of 1973 parts should work as well, But the very front and very rear were altered and that might also effect fenders/quarter panels. Glass should be okay for 71-73 (Esp on sedans/wagons) 1974-76 had some MORE sheet metal and dashboard changes, but glass for windsheilds and perhaps side windows on sedans/wagons should work on 1971-1976 (as should Cadillac DeVille and Olds 98s) Speaking of witch, The Oldsmobile 98s of the 71-76 era were Mechanically similar. (Cadillac used a different engine.) Also many mechanical parts from same year LeSabres/88s are shared. Being that these are full sized GM cars you should be able to get mechanical parts almost anywhere now and perhaps until doomsday. Body and trim stuff will have to be scavenged Check Hemmings Motor News, eBay. Good Luck My Electra was one of my favorite cars!
Most partisan forces seldom have a single source of arms and must make do with whatever they can acquire. The various partisans in Yugoslavia were variously armed with a mix of Pre-War Yugoslavian rifles from Pre-First World War Serbian, Mexican and Turkish sources, all converted to fire a 7.9 x 57mm cartridge, and two sets of rifles from Belgian and Czech sources that were ordered in the 1920s and '30s. Most of these had a Mauser-type action. Captured firearms from Bulgarian, German, Hungarian and Italian sources were common as well; perhaps with the Mauser Kar-98 being the most popular because of its reliability and the availability of stocks from Bosnian, Croatian and Albanian units that had been armed by the Germans. Italian rifles would have been widely available after Italian surrender in September 1943. Increasingly in 1944, both the Western Allies and the Soviets were in a position to offer a third source of rifles -- further complicating an already byzantine supply situation. Interestingly, the most common rifles in partisan hands must have been the M1922 FN produced rifles and Mauser Kar-98s, as both were still provided with ammunition and refurbishment by Yugoslavian arms factories in the immediate aftermath of the Second World War.
A 99 Honda because nicer Answer: No. Buy the '97. The '98s and up are apparently prone to transmission troubles that the '94-'97s are not. Choose the lower mileage vehicle, and it'll also have lower personal property taxes on it. I've seen very nice, well maintained 160,000-mile cars, and I've seen 80,000 mile cars that were abused and not maintained, even though they both looked similar at a glance. Go test drive both of them, and make the decision after you've carefully evaluated each one.