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2003-2007 Ford Econoline Van Mirror Dual Glass Manual Driver Left Hand Side Lh on 2040-parts.com

US $42.90
Location:

Ontario, California, US

Ontario, California, US
Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Refund will be given as:Money Back Item must be returned within:14 Days Return policy details:Buyers must notify us within 7 days from the delivered date to obtain RMA #, packages without RMA # will be refused for return. We must receive the items within 14 days from their delivered date to process refunds. All items must be returned in the original condition, INCLUDING THE ORIGINAL BOX. Buyers are responsible for shipping-and-insurance fees (or restocking fees for free-shipping items) of all returns unless stated otherwise. Please refer to the main product page for details. Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Restocking Fee:No Interchange Part Number:FO1320253 Replacement on Vehicle:Left , Front Warranty:Yes Manufacturer Part Number:FO1320253

China builds world’s longest sea bridge (video)

Sun, 03 Jul 2011

Qingdao Jiaozhou Bay Bridge - world's longest sea bgridge We’ve got some decent bridges in the UK. Some are pretty – Tower Bridge – and some are more practical, like the Queen Elizabeth II Dartford crossing. Some of our bridges even seem quite big, by UK standards.

Lotus Elise Club Racer Launched

Fri, 18 Feb 2011

The Lotus Elise Club Racer Lotus may have plans to be the next Aston Martin, but for now it’s stuck with an Evora that’s not selling as well as it should and an Elise that is basically the same as the car that launched a decade ago. The plan with the Evora – apart from the rather odd move of getting Mansory to tart up an Evora – is to get the Germans in to give the Evora’s interior some class. As for the Lotus Elise, all there really is to do – because it has a hard-core clientele anyway – is to divvy up the odd special.

Starting Out: CDN launches Car Design Glossary

Tue, 03 Jul 2007

Drawing is the basic language of designers, and is the time-honoured way in which a designer will communicate an idea. However, designers are often required to describe or explain their designs - and the work of others - in words, and for this, they need a vocabulary. The vocabulary they use is one whose origins stretch back to another era and to different disciplines, and which, with the now multi-cultural nature of the profession and advances in computer technology, is still growing.