Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

00- 05* Toyota Celica L. Left Driver Lh Rear Stub Axle Knuckle Hub Gt Oem* 17742 on 2040-parts.com

US $102.70
Location:

San Antonio, Texas, United States

San Antonio, Texas, United States
Condition:Used GenuineOEM:True Stock #:DT1297 Inventory Number:490-58770L PartNumber:490 Inventory ID:17742 Mileage:192000 Designation:Used Model:CELICA Placement:Stub Axle, Rear Year:2002

Ferrari smashes world record

Wed, 13 Jun 2007

By Jack Rix Motor Shows 13 June 2007 03:53 Another record for Ferrari? Ferrari has set a new record on the Silverstone circuit – but this one didn't involve F1 car heroics or three figure speeds. Ferrari GB and the Ferrari Owners Club set a new world record for the 'largest parade of Ferrari cars,' tripling the previous effort.

'Every transport link' now in Google Maps

Thu, 15 May 2014

TECHNOLOGY giant Google has updated its official Maps app to include every transport link in Great Britain for the first time. The app has, until now, covered London and some areas of south-east England in terms of transport links, but this new update expands to the rest of the country as well as Scotland and Wales; including every bus, tram, train and ferry route available. David Tattersall, product manager for public transport in Google Maps, said: "This is the single largest and most comprehensive update we've ever done to our public transport coverage anywhere in the world, so it's something we're really proud of.

Paramount Marauder – yep, the one from Top Gear

Mon, 27 Jun 2011

The Marauder lays waste a wall We knew the Hamster was off to South Africa to play with a vehicle that made the Hummer look like a Tonka Toy. And we knew – because they ‘hinted’ at it when we spoke to them last week – that the whole Top Gear segment had more than a little to do with the Paramount Group in South Africa, purveyors of innovative armoured vehicles. So, as suspected, we were treated to Richard conquering the Urban Jungle of Johannesburg in the Paramount Marauder, an aptly-named, go anywhere, seemingly indestructible piece of military hardware made street-legal.