Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

2006-2009 Toyota 4runner Cd Mp3 Player Sat Radio Oem on 2040-parts.com

US $207.94
Location:

Avon, Indiana, US

Avon, Indiana, US
Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Refund will be given as:Money Back Item must be returned within:30 Days Return policy details:Please check the listing for important warranty information regarding the item being sold. Some listings include a warranty and others do not. Each listing will clearly state the warranty length if applicable. Any listing that says “Sold AS-IS” does not include a warranty and all sales are final. ***Warranties do NOT cover any labor costs! NO EXCEPTIONS*** Parts Covered by Warranty: In case the part sold fails to work due to defective material or wrong fitment, LKQ will replace the part or issue a full refund (LKQ’s choice) up to the cost of the part purchased price (no refunds for labor costs), see warranty tab in the listing for more details. If the part you receive does not fit or work in your vehicle, we may ask you for a digital picture and your vehicle’s VIN number so we can properly assist you. Items NOT Covered by Warranty: For parts that are not defective, but are returned, the following will apply: 20% Restocking Fee, shipping costs are not refunded, and customer pays for shipping the part back. ****Airbags, seat belts, and tires are sold "AS IS"**** Use of Freight Forwarders VOIDS all warranties: LKQ Online will ship the part to the address provided, however our policy about forwarded packages is that once the item leaves the United States, returns/warranties/or refunds are no longer valid. This means that if the part is not the correct part, does not work properly, or becomes damaged in any way due to the length of transit time, we will not cover it under our return or warranty policies. We will also not refund any additional costs of shipping due to forwarded items. Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Restocking Fee:No Manufacturer Part Number:86120-35340 Interchange Part Number:50202 Part Brand:~73999522

Bugatti rolls out another ‘Legends’ Special – the Veyron Grand Sport Vitesse Black Bess

Fri, 11 Apr 2014

It’s the Bugatti Veyron Black Bess No, Bugatti hasn’t named their latest Legends limited edition car – the Veyron Grand Sport Vitesse Black Bess – after Dick Turpin’s horse (well, not directly anyway), but after the Bugatti Type 18 – dubbed Black Bess – which was the Bugatti Veyron of its day. Only seven Type 18s were built – between 1912 and 1914 – and just three remain, with the one dubbed Black Bess (which did get its name from Dick Turpin’s horse) on display in the Louman Museum in The Hague and complete with its 5.0 litre four-cylinder engine good for 100bhp and a top speed of 100mph. The new Black Bess Bugatti is a Veyron Grand Sport Vitesse with 1184 ‘black’ horses, a 0-62mph of 2.6 seconds and a top speed of 233mph and comes with a carbon fibre body painted in black with gold highlights (and looking like a 1970s JPS F1 livery).

BMW i8 plug-in hybrid supercar is more economical than BMW thought

Mon, 10 Mar 2014

The BMW i8 does 134.5mpg on the official cycle. The production version of BMW’s plug-in hybrid supercar – the i8 – finally arrived at the Frankfurt Motor Show last year offering almost proper supercar price – £100k – along with an almost supercar 0-62mph of 4.4 seconds. What the i8 also offers is ridiculous economy figures thanks to its plug-in hybrid power (and thanks to the daft way official economy figures are calculated) and now, as the i8 gets ready to go in to full production, BMW has revealed that the official economy figures have just got dafter.

rusEFI: Open-source homebuilt fuel-injection set to rival Megasquirt

Thu, 24 Apr 2014

Electronic fuel-delivery and ignition controls have given us a new golden age of engine efficiency and performance. Most of us would never go back to the dark ages—say, before 1990—when you could still buy new vehicles with carburetors and clunky distributors. From the point of view of those of us who like to modify our cars, however, the black-box nature of engine-control computers limits our options for making changes to how our fuel-delivery and ignition systems function.