Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

1999 Oldsmobile Intrigue Tail Lamp Light Right on 2040-parts.com

US $75.00
Location:

Garretson, South Dakota, US

Garretson, South Dakota, US
Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Refund will be given as:Money back or exchange (buyer's choice) Item must be returned within:30 Days Return policy details:Buyer is responsible for shipping any returns, defective items, or warranty items at their cost. Nordstroms will ship warranty items at our cost. Original shipping charges are not refundable at any time unless preauthorized by Nordstroms Ebay staff. Please contact us for any questions on this policy. Any items shipped to locations outside of the 50 US States are not returnable for money back guarantee or warranty replacement. Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Restocking Fee:No Inventory ID:2595184 Part Placement:Passenger/Right Interchange Part Number:166-01729R Year:1999 Model:INTRIGUE Stock Number:1YP087 Mileage:2036 Conditions and Options:4DR,6-99,GL Genuine OEM:YES Brand:OLDSMOBILE Part Number:2595184

Dodge introduces 100th Anniversary Editions for LA Auto Show

Tue, 19 Nov 2013

Dodge is celebrating 100 years of mass-producing automobiles next year. To celebrate, the company is introducing two special 100th Anniversary Editions of the Charger and Challenger at the Los Angeles Auto Show. John and Horace Dodge were already making a decent living supplying parts to Detroit’s burgeoning automotive industry when they decided to introduce their own car, the Dodge Model 30, in 1914.

The UK’s best-selling car is… a toy car

Thu, 15 Aug 2013

Forget the Ford Fiesta. With 2012 sales of a ‘mere’ 109,625, it has to relinquish its best-selling status to this young gun – the Cozy Coupe. The ever-popular children's toy, littering many a hallway across the land, sold around 143,000 in 2012.

London's GPS-based speed-limit trial puts Big Brother's foot on the gas pedal

Wed, 08 Jul 2009

A fleet of 12 Toyota Priuses in London have been fitted with GPS-linked speed limiters to measure how drivers respond to having their speed controlled by a computer rather than their own feet. For now, the trial is local to London, run by Transport for London, the agency that manages the city's roads, buses, subways and trains. The agency is using its own fleet of Priuses for the test and will add a bus and a taxi later this year.