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00-04 Mitsubishi Montero Fog Lamp Mi2592111 Lens Body W.light Bulb Bracket Left on 2040-parts.com

US $37.62
Location:

48 States Only, US

48 States Only, US
Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Refund will be given as:Money back or exchange (buyer's choice) Item must be returned within:30 Days Return policy details:We will send you a replacement part or refund you the purchase price if you received a defective part, a part that was damaged in transit, a part is missing, or you received the wrong part. Please be prepared to send back the part you did receive. We will pay for the return shipping cost by emailing you a pre-paid shipping label with instructions for returning the part. Return shipping will be paid by:Seller Restocking Fee:No Warranty:Yes Part Brand:Replacement Placement on Vehicle:Left Surface Finish:Clear lens

Fog/Driving Lights for Sale

Ford Mustang RTR knocks on the door of the Boss 302

Wed, 18 Jul 2012

As customers continue to throw handfuls of dollars at Ford to get their hands on the Mustang Boss 302, the popularity of that car might leave some discerning Blue Oval buyers wanting something more unique. Enter Vaughn Gittin Jr., world champion drifter and Mustang fan, with his vision for the perfect 'Stang—the RTR. Designing and building the 2013 Ford Mustang RTR was a combined effort among Gittin Jr., Ford and Classic Design Concepts.

Concept Car of the Week: Citroën C6 Lignage (1999)

Fri, 19 Jul 2013

By the late ‘90s, the bold but ageing Citroën XM was becoming irrelevant compared to the freshly updated German sedans. The press even started to suggest the XM would be the last high-end car to carry the double chevron. What they didn't know was that the designers were already working on the next model, although that wouldn't be ready until few years later.

Electric cars must get noisier, ICE cars must get quieter

Sun, 06 Apr 2014

Electric cars will have to make a noise to protect pedestrians It’s four years since the Lotus solution for making electric cars noisy raised its head, since when the US has had a go at the Pedestrian Safety Enhancement Act in 2010 to do the same thing, the Japanese are playing too, and Toyota revealed the Prius Vehicle Notification System, and now the EU has decided its time to act to make EVs emit ‘noise’. Despite the most appealing part of an EV being that it makes our cities quieter, legislators worry about the blind, partially sighted and distracted pedestrian (think earphones and a Smartphone) being mowed down by a stalking electric car and feel the need to act. So the European Parliament has decided that by 2019 new models of electric vehicle will have to make a noise in cities, and that by 2021 all new hybrids and electrics must be noisy too.