1998-2010 Vw Beetle Gray Glove Box Assembly With Key --volkswagen Glove Box Grey on 2040-parts.com
Littleton, Colorado, United States
1998-10 VW New Beetle grey HARDTOP glove box assembly. Comes with the key as shown. The factory plastic welds are all good. Has the metal reinforcement bracket. One mounting tab is missing as shown in the pictures. It is on the side under the removable cover.
Free shipping to the contiguous 48 states only. ALASKA, HAWAII, PUERTO RICO AND ALL OTHERS MUST CONTACT BEFORE BUYING FOR SHIPPING QUOTE. |
Glove Box for Sale
65 chevy ii nova glove box molding
70-81 pontiac firebird trans am red glove box lid oem(US $9.99)
1994 honda del sol glove box black interior oem #2950(US $30.99)
06 07 08 09 10 11 honda civic glove box oem tan(US $49.99)
1998-2001 dodge ram truck gray glove box door grey gray(US $65.00)
99 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 volkswagen jetta gli golf gti r32 black glove box oem(US $100.00)
Yaris To Launch This Summer Bursting With Kit
Wed, 02 Jul 2014JAPANESE car maker Toyota is launching its new Yaris supermini this summer, and hopes to broaden the car’s appeal with a revised range. The firm is offering more choice, more equipment options and a wealth of advanced features for on-board comfort, communications, safety and style as it launches the Yaris into an increasingly competitive market sector. Established Active and Icon grades are joined by new Sport and Excel trims.
College Exhibition: Monash University Degree Show 2009
Mon, 25 Jan 2010Graduating students from the Industrial Design undergraduate program at Monash University in Melbourne, Australia recently presented their annual degree show. One third of the group developed transport related projects encompassing a broad range of topics including energy efficient personal mobility, sustainable materials and manufacturing, scientific data collection and emergency services. Overall, the students' work reflected a strong emphasis on user interaction, systems innovation and production integrity.
'Get tough on killer drivers' call
Fri, 21 Mar 2014DRIVERS who cause death on the roads should be jailed for at least five years, according to the majority of motorists. Eighty-two per cent reckon sentences should be higher for those drivers who kill, a survey by road safety charity Brake and insurance company Direct Line found. Brake said the latest Government figures showed 62% of those convicted of killing someone through risky driving were jailed and only 9% got sentences of five years or more.