Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

2013 Honda Civic Rear Seat Belt & Retractor Only Center Gray on 2040-parts.com

US $75.00
Location:

Garretson, South Dakota, US

Garretson, South Dakota, US
Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Refund will be given as:Money back or exchange (buyer's choice) Item must be returned within:30 Days Return policy details:Buyer is responsible for shipping any returns, defective items, or warranty items at their cost. Nordstroms will ship warranty items at our cost. Original shipping charges are not refundable at any time unless preauthorized by Nordstroms Ebay staff. Please contact us for any questions on this policy. Any items shipped to locations outside of the 50 US States are not returnable for money back guarantee or warranty replacement. Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Restocking Fee:No Inventory ID:2638450 Interchange Part Number:212.HO1D13 Year:2013 Model:HONDA CIVIC Stock Number:ZH1648 Mileage:144 Conditions and Options:CTR REAR,4DR,GRY,LX Genuine OEM:YES Brand:HONDA Part Number:2638450

Seat Belts & Parts for Sale

New car emissions lowest ever

Mon, 17 Mar 2014

THE AVERAGE CAR in the UK now emits an average of 128.3g/km, the lowest ever and almost 30% less than in 2000. This means the UK has exceeded the target set by the European Union for average CO2 emissions of 130g/km by 2015. The next target is 95g/km that is set for 2020.

Concept Car of the Week: Dodge Charger III (1968)

Fri, 09 Aug 2013

In 1968, at the dawn of the muscle car era, the performance-oriented Dodge brand offered a unique range of powerful and iconic models such as the Charger, the Dart and the Coronet. While working in parallel on the Mk II production Charger, designers and engineers created the third in a series of concept cars carrying the same name that aimed to showcase futuristic design and technological innovations to arouse the public and test its reaction. Dodge general manager Robert B.

Toyota studies a rear-drive entry for Scion

Fri, 06 Aug 2010

Scion vice president Jack Hollis is a former Stanford and AAA baseball player who, but for an injury, coulda been a contender, coulda played in the show. He's not one to boast--he didn't tell us of his baseball days, we got it from someone else. Nonetheless, you'd imagine the 6-foot-2-inch auto exec would have a pretty good self-image.