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2000 Toyota Celica Engine Control on 2040-parts.com

US $30.00
Location:

Covington, Georgia, US

Covington, Georgia, US
Returns Accepted:ReturnsNotAccepted Brand:DENSO Manufacturer Part Number:175200-6540 Interchange Part Number:89666-20041 Other Part Number:1ZZ-FE Surface Finish:ALUMINUM Warranty:No Country of Manufacture:Japan

 ENGINE CONTROL 2000 TOYOTA CELICA GREAT USED CONDITION

Daimler considers building Mercedes C-class in U.S.

Wed, 23 Sep 2009

Daimler AG could move some production of the Mercedes-Benz C-class to the United States from Germany, a German newspaper reported Wednesday. The Stuttgarter Zeitung said some C-class production could be transferred to the carmaker's plant in Vance, Ala., from Sindelfingen, near Stuttgart, as part of a wider production shakeup planned by Daimler to reduce costs. In the future, the C-class sedan could be built in three locations: Bremen, Germany; Vance, Ala., and in China, the newspaper said.

Ford begins Daventry site transformation

Mon, 12 May 2014

FORD IS to invest millions of pounds in a new, state-of-the-art training facility on its existing site in Daventry, Northamptonshire, as part of a wider forward-looking programme. The new site will merge the capabilities of two existing Ford colleges – the Technical Training Centre located separately at Daventry, and the Henry Ford College in Loughborough, which provides training for technicians, sales staff and management throughout Ford’s national dealer network. Scheduled to open next year, the brand-new centre will replace the existing facilities to become a centre of excellence for training across the country.

Hyundai ix35 Hydrogen FCEV helps kick off EcoIslands Global Summit

Fri, 26 Oct 2012

The Hyundai ix35 Hydrogen Fuel Cell has helped kick off the EcoIslands Summit on the Isle of Wight promoting renewable energy for Islands. Maybe, now more and more car makers and suppliers are starting to lose interest in BEVs (Battery Electric Vehicles), we can look properly to future prospects for an energy source for powering the world’s cars? And none, short of cold fusion becoming a reality, offers more promise than Hydrogen, the most plentiful element in the universe.