Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

2003 Rsx Airbag Control Module on 2040-parts.com

C $65.99
Location:

Kelowna, British Columbia, Canada

Kelowna, British Columbia, Canada
Condition:Used Brand:Honda Manufacturer Part Number:77960-S6M-A920-M3, 5WK43205

Bought it from auto wreckers but didn't end up needing to use it.
Still in the box with the tags from when I bought it.

New Volkswagen Golf GTI spec revealed: Gets 217bhp or 227bhp

Wed, 27 Feb 2013

Volkswagen has revealed the new 2013 Golf GTI Specs ahead of a Geneva showing. Gets 217bhp or an extra 10bhp with the Performance Package. As we already know, the new Golf GTI comes with a 2.0 litre TFSI engine good for 217bhp or, if you opt for the Performance Package, you can have an extra 10bhp – enough to cut the standard GTI’s 0-62mph (6.5s) by 0.1 seconds and add an ectra 3mph to the top speed (rises to 155mph).

John Entwistle’s Rolls Royce Silver Shadow ESTATE up for grabs

Thu, 29 Aug 2013

John Entwistle’s Rolls Royce Silver Shadow Shooting Brake (pictured) up for sale Rolls Royce has never made an estate car – or Shooting Brake, as posh estates (and modern wannabes) tend to be badged – but that hasn’t stopped well-heeled owners from Maharajahs to rock stars turning Rolls Royces in to hunting and shooting transport for almost a hundred years. Taking the finest creations of Rolls and turning them in to a bespoke shooting brake is not a cheap hobby, but if you fancy a bit of gentrified rock ‘n’ roll history, Bonham’s have got The Ox’s (that’s John Entwistle, the Who bassist, for the younger readers) customised Silver Shadow Shooting Brake up for grabs. The Ox had the Rolls turned in to a Shooting Brake by an unknown coachbuilders back in the 1980s to carry his Irish Wolfhounds, and when he died as a result of a bit to much nose candy his Rolls Royce Shooting Brake was bought by the current owner from Entwistle’s wife.

The great Tesla bubble of 2013

Thu, 03 Oct 2013

Do I go too far out on a limb to suggest Tesla is the modern-day version of the Great Tulip Bubble of March 1637? Remember, that was when speculators drove prices of just-introduced tulip bulbs to astronomical heights. Some single bulbs cost more than 10 times an average working man's salary.