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2004 Ford Mustang Wiring Diagrams Electrical Service Shop Manual on 2040-parts.com

US $29.10
Location:

Medford, Oregon, US

Medford, Oregon, US
Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Item must be returned within:14 Days Refund will be given as:Money back or exchange (buyer's choice) Return policy details:If we ship the wrong item--we will replace it with the correct item. Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Restocking Fee:No Make:Ford

Hyundai enlists London College of Fashion to raise awareness of Hydrogen Fuel Cell cars

Thu, 15 May 2014

The Hyundai ix35 FCEV (pictured) will get graphics from the LCF to promote FCEVs Even though car makers have been playing with the possibility of cars powered by hydrogen for years, it’s only now that an real-world FCEVs are starting to hit the road. Car makers certainly seemed to have made the hydrogen fuel cell a practical proposition for powering cars (although cost is still an obstacle), but that’s just the start of making FCEVs a viable option. Huge amounts of work need to be done to create a hydrogen refuelling network but, perhaps more importantly, car buyers need to understand that FCEVs are viable and that they exist at all.

Hyundai move from Baboons to Kids to test quality

Fri, 05 Jul 2013

Hyundai let a troop of 4 & 5 year olds loose on an i30 to test quality Last year, Hyundai let a troop of 40 safari park baboons loose on an i30 to see if, left to their own devices, they could trash Hyundai’s very well bolted together (just ask Martin Winterkorn) i30. It was a clever way to demonstrate that the i30 doesn’t just look good, but is made of a bit more than recycled baked bean cans and Fairy liquid bottles. The i30 came through the baboon test with flying colours (even the company tasked with cleaning it up after the baboons commented on the story that they were impressed by how unscathed the i30 was), but Hyundai has now come up with a quality test that makes the baboon adventure look like a walk in the (safari) park.

The Great Texas Beer Run

Thu, 17 Feb 2011

For reasons still not clear, boatloads of German immigrants made Texas their home in the 1800s. What they thought they would find similar to their cold, richly forested homeland in the hellaciously hot, mes-quite-scrub, rattlesnake-filled Texas Hill Country is lost to history. Worse, they brought almost nothing with them from the Old World to remind them of home.