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2008 Suzuki Xl-7 Steering Column Oem 4820078j00 , 4822078j01 on 2040-parts.com

US $100.00
Location:

Mifflinburg, Pennsylvania, United States

Mifflinburg, Pennsylvania, United States
Condition:Used Brand:OEM Other Part Number:4820078J00 , 4822078J01 Manufacturer Part Number:4820078J00 , 4822078J01 Warranty:Yes Interchange Part Number:4820078J00 , 4822078J01





REMOVED FROM A 2008 XL-7 WITH 80K MILES


On Apr-07-16 at 16:40:56 PDT, seller added the following information:


On May-10-16 at 07:49:31 PDT, seller added the following information:

Electric cars get a £500 million government cash boost – but will it get spent?

Mon, 05 May 2014

The new BMW i3 EV (pictured) will be subsidised until 2017. The subsidy of up to £5000 paid to buyers of electric cars has been with us for three years, but it hasn’t had much impact on EV sales and it did look like the government had decided to scrap it all together. But it looks like the coalition has allowed Nick Clegg to have his way with EV subsides in a move that will see £500 million injected in to promoting and supporting electric cars in the UK in the next few years.

Infiniti recalls Q50 sedans over steer-by-wire system

Mon, 16 Dec 2013

Infiniti is recalling a number of its new 2014 Q50 sedans over a fault in its steer-by-wire system. The recall concerns Q50 sedans equipped with Direct Adaptive Steering that have received a software version which may disable the power steering software when the engine compartment reaches freezing temperatures. There's a mechanical backup system to prevent steering failure that kicks in via a clutch if the Direct Adaptive Steering were to fail, but the NHTSA notes that this backup may not engage in time if the Direct Adaptive Steering fails, increasing the chance of a crash.

Just one new Ferrari sold in Greece in 2012 – and it came to the UK!

Thu, 21 Feb 2013

Just one new Ferrari was sold in Greece in 2012 in the depths of Greece’s austerity, and it seems even that lone Ferrari came to the UK. None of which is particularly surprising considering the mess Greece has got in to since its tied itself to monster economies like Germany when it joined the Eurozone. There’s no doubt there are still plenty of gazillionaires in Greece, but how many of them would want to risk parading their wealth in a brand new Ferrari when Greece is in such a financial mess, more than one in four are out of work and soup kitchens are springing up as normal Greeks struggle to even feed themselves?