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00-06 Denali/escalade/sierra/silverado/suburban/tahoe/yukon Mirror Man Painted R on 2040-parts.com

US $25.90
Location:

Ontario, California, US

Ontario, California, US
Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Refund will be given as:Money Back Item must be returned within:14 Days Return policy details:Buyers must notify us within 7 days from the delivered date to obtain RMA #, packages without RMA # will be refused for return. We must receive the items within 14 days from their delivered date to process refunds. All items must be returned in the original condition, INCLUDING THE ORIGINAL BOX. Buyers are responsible for shipping-and-insurance fees (or restocking fees for free-shipping items) of all returns unless stated otherwise. Please refer to the main product page for details. Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Restocking Fee:No Interchange Part Number:GM1321208 Replacement on Vehicle:Right , Front Warranty:Yes Manufacturer Part Number:GM1321208

One Lap of the Web: Moby Dick, mass transit failures, and the return of the Ford Rotunda

Mon, 16 Sep 2013

-- The Porsche 935/78 race car, perhaps better known as Moby Dick, looks a bit like a typical 911 that someone heated up until it was pliable and then slowly, carefully stretched until its nose and tail were elongated past the point of absurdity. And then someone else came along and stuck a giant wing on the back. But it is a real car, and Speedhunters has proof in the form of a photo essay.

Citroen DS 6WR SUV (NOT DS X7) is the production version of the Wild Rubis

Tue, 15 Apr 2014

The Citroen DS 6WR (pictured) is the first DS SUV Last week Citroen started to tease a new SUV heading for the Beijing Motor Show, which we thought would be the DS X7. But is seems Citroen has thought better of using a moniker like ‘X7′, so it’s changed the handle for its Chineses SUV to Citroen DS 6WR, but it’s still a production version of the Wild Rubis Concept and still the first production DS SUV. albeit only for China – at least for starters.

Hackers compromise Prius, seize control of wheel, brakes and more

Thu, 25 Jul 2013

As an enthusiast, you're probably already worried about an autonomous car ripping the joy -- and the steering wheel -- from your hands. Now, according to Andy Greenberg at Forbes, you also have to worry about hackers ripping the steering wheel out of your car's hands (boy, do we feel strange writing that). That's because a car's computerized systems are as prone to hacking as your malware-laden desktop.