Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

1998 1999 Arctic Cat Powder Special 600 Efi Le Magneto Stator Coil Snowmobile on 2040-parts.com

US $49.00
Location:

Michigan, United States, US

Michigan, United States, US
Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Refund will be given as:Money Back Item must be returned within:14 Days Return policy details:Zoom Zoom Parts accepts returns. Customer is responsible for all handling charges for shipping item back to us. Refund on a purchase will be given once item has been received back to us, refund will be issued less 20% to customers payment method on all products. Negative feedback given to us will void all warranties on customers purchase regardless. Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Restocking Fee:No Warranty:Yes

Ford C-Max & Grand C-Max 2015 FACELIFT revealed – debut at the 2014 Paris Motor Show

Wed, 17 Sep 2014

Ford C-Max & Grand C-Max 2015 FACELIFT revealed Ford has been busy grafting their new grill on to cars across their range recently, and the latest models to get the ‘Gaydon Grill’ (and other tweaks) are the C-Max and Grand C-Max – Ford’s 5 and 7 seat MPVs based on the Focus – revealed today ahead of a debut at the Paris Motor Show next month. As you’e expect, the changes amount to pretty much what we’ve seen with the Ford Focus facelift, so there’s a new grill to make the Ford statement accompanied by new headlights and bonnet. Round the back the tailgate has been given a slicker, simplified makeover, there’s a new bumper and smaller lights.

Subaru BRZ (2012) insurance groups announced

Mon, 25 Jun 2012

Subaru has announced the BRZ sports car will fall into insurance group 30, with higher-end SE Lux models in group 31. How does the Subaru BRZ's insurance compare to its rivals? Tricky question, since the BRZ, as a £25k, rear-drive 2+2 coupe, doesn't have much in the way of brand new, direct rivals (save for its Toyota GT86 sister of course).

FCA issues warning on logbook loans

Fri, 06 Jun 2014

VULNERABLE people who use their car as security to take out a loan are finding themselves squeezed even harder financially and even threatened, the City regulator has found. The Financial Conduct Authority warned it will put firms offering logbook loans out of action if they do not "dramatically" improve their standards, after finding evidence of poor behaviour including little or no affordability checks being carried out and some applicants being encouraged to manipulate details of their income. It said lenders are failing to properly spell out exactly how expensive such debts will be, with the true cost often masked by an emphasis on "low" weekly repayments and key terms and conditions buried in small print.