1996 1997 1998 1999 Infiniti I30/nissan Maxima Mirror Heated Driver Left Side Lh on 2040-parts.com
Ontario, California, US
Mirrors for Sale
- Chevy monte carlo 00-05 power non heated mirror right passenger replacement rh(US $52.75)
- 04-08 nissan maxima drivers side door mirror oem lkq(US $162.09)
- Side view mirror right (japan built) manual lever controlled platinum# 1270633(US $69.75)
- Gmc chevy pickup truck power side view door mirror passenger side right rh(US $27.87)
- Side view mirror right platinum# 1270813(US $64.86)
- Side view mirror left power, heated, w/o memory power platinum# 1270748(US $83.54)
Toyota C-HR Concept revealed as a funky urban crossover
Mon, 22 Sep 2014Toyota C-HR Concept revealed as a funky urban crossover Last week we had a tease for the Toyota C-HR Concept and now, with its debut just over a week away at the Paris Motor Show, Toyota has revealed the first couple of photos. Likely based on the Auris – and arriving in 2015 as the Toyota Auris Cross – the C-HR Concept is a funky, high-riding urban crossover aimed at the burgeoning crossover market and destined to slot in below the RAV-4. What the C-HR Concept also does is preview a more cutting-edge design language from Toyota with shallow headlights merging in to the front grill, vertical running lights, big haunches, oversized wheels (which are unlikely to make production) and boomerang-shaped LED tail lights.
Toyota Prius: Less polluting than a farting sheep
Tue, 04 Jan 2011Toyota Prius - less polluting than a farting sheep Regular readers know our point of view on the whole man-made global warming theory. Tosh. Utter tosh.
Video: GM's Clay Dean on the future of urban mobility
Wed, 14 Aug 2013Clay Dean is the star of a new Faces of GM video, Anticipating the Driving Experience of the Future. The global design director for GM's Advanced Design Group, whose job also entails exploring future transportation design solutions, talks about the need to avoid short-term thinking on urban mobility, as by 2030 60 percent of the world's population will live in cities. As new challenges start to emerge, such as increasing congestion, Dean believes it is time to start thinking about transportation in a completely different way.