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1997chysler Concorde Steering Wheel Air Bag Complete on 2040-parts.com

US $75.00
Location:

Napa, California, US

Napa, California, US
Returns Accepted:ReturnsNotAccepted Warranty:No

1997 CHYSLER CONCORDE STEERING WHEEL COULMN HOUSEING AND TURN SIGNAL ASSEMBLY WITH THE KEY ASSEMBLY ALSO IN MINT CONDITION .PERFECT IN EVERY WAY

Steering Wheels & Horns for Sale

Rude roads hit house prices

Tue, 25 Feb 2014

STREETS with rude-sounding names like Crotch Crescent, Turkey Cock Lane, Bell End and The Knob could turn out to be a haven for property hunters looking to snap up a bargain, research suggests. The study for website NeedaProperty.com looked for evidence of what impact living in a street with a suggestive name could have on the value of your home. Properties on streets with innuendo-laden names were found to be around one fifth or £84,000 cheaper on average than other homes situated nearby.

‘Lamborghini’ Ferruccio (2008) first official pictures

Tue, 01 Apr 2008

By Mike Elwin First Official Pictures 01 April 2008 10:57 This is the Lamborghini that never was: the stillborn Ferruccio project that has just been put on ice owing to a lack of orders. Designed by Italian coachbuilder Magvisio, the Ferruccio was a rebodied Murcielago LP640 and would have been faster than any current car wearing the Lamborghini badge, with a claimed top speed of 230mph. Although not an official Lamborghini project, Sant'Agata was monitoring the scheme ‘with interest’, according to its creators.Magvisio specialises in customisation jobs for private clients, and the Ferruccio was to be its first stab at designing a car from the ground up.

Toyota Prius plug-in to cost from £31k

Wed, 21 Sep 2011

Toyota Prius plug-in will cost £31k We thought it was probably too good to be true. When we revealed that the US price for the new Toyota Prius plug-in was 36 per cent more than a regular Prius, we did hope that price increase would apply to the UK too. Because if Toyota were to do the same in the UK, the plug-in Prius would have come in – after the taxpayer very generously chipped in a £5k subsidy for ‘eco’ cars – at a ‘buy’ price in the UK around £2.5k more than the non plug-in Prius.