24 Inch X 100ft Window Tint Roll on 2040-parts.com
Larned, Kansas, United States
One roll of Pride 50% 24inch x 100ft window tint.
|
Window Tint for Sale
- Unger pro handle(US $24.64)
- Brand new premium window film roll 40 in x 100 ft overstock price! vlt 15% 10(US $120.00)
- Audi a4 sedan 02-08(US $31.37)
- Nt cutter pro "red dot" utility knife window tint(US $13.99)
- Set 2 putco 480055 front only chrome window visors suburban avalanche chevy 2007(US $34.99)
- Car van bus window tint film tinting dark black 15% vlt 50cm*6meter
GM China opens Advanced Design Center in Shanghai
Wed, 19 Dec 2012General Motors China has opened a new advanced design studio as part of the establishment of its Advanced Technical Center in Shanghai. The Advanced Design Center will provide GM China's designers the tools to explore future mobility solutions and technology integration on a local and global scale. "Our new Advanced Design Center in Shanghai is part of the GM Global Design Center network, which webs from California to Germany to India and Korea and points beyond," said Wulin Gaowa, design director of the GM China Advanced Design Center.
BMW Alpina D3 Bi-Turbo (2013) at Frankfurt motor show
Mon, 09 Sep 2013If a collection of numbers dictated how we ranked and rated a car, the new BMW Alpina D3 might just be the best all-rounder in the world. You’re looking at a discreet and comfortable 3-series that’ll return a claimed 53.2mpg, and scorch to 62mph in just 4.6 seconds, quicker than the outgoing BMW M3. Read on to find out how.
Honda starts deliveries of FCX Clarity
Fri, 22 Aug 2008By Ben Whitworth Motor Industry 22 August 2008 11:08 Honda has started first deliveries of its radical FCX Clarity fuel cell vehicle to customers in America. Some 200 hand-built FCX’s will be delivered to a wide range of customers, including high-profile celebrities – like actress Jamie Lee Curtis – as well as normal working families. The project is part of Honda’s goal to stimulate energy suppliers to create a more viable hydrogen supply network, a move backed by Arnold Schwarzenegger, the governor of California.