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2x Car Hid Xenon Headlight Lamps Light For 55w H1 12000k Bulbs on 2040-parts.com

US $11.98
Location:

shanghai, shanghai China, CN

shanghai, shanghai  China, CN
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:We are happy to replace faulty goods. You agree to pay for the return shipping on exchanges and returns and we will reimburse this cost upon verification of a fault with the product. we also offer full money back guarantee within 30 days of receipt. No quibble. Product exchange is our normal policy, with refunds in exceptional cases. Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Restocking Fee:No Surface Finish:Xenon HID Bulbs Warranty:Yes

BMW M4 gets noisy (2013): listen to the new M4’s turbo straight-six here

Tue, 13 Aug 2013

  With the unveiling of the new BMW M4 imminent, BMW’s excitement has got the better of it with the M Division releasing a video showing featuring the new M4’s engine note. The video might be called ‘BMW M is preparing something new’, but the engine isn’t really a fresh design. It’s actually a tweaked, twin-turbo version of the 435i’s 3.0-litre straight-six, making this the first M Division 3-series derivative to use forced induction.

Storing classic concept cars is a huge hassle

Thu, 30 Jan 2014

If you see a dazzling concept car at an auto show this year, consider this: Somebody is going to have to find the space to park it and maintain it in a heritage collection, perhaps until the end of time. Preserving this year's hits as the museum pieces of the future is one of the great backroom issues of the auto industry. If you need to see the first wood-paneled Honda Civic Country station wagon from 1980 for some good reason, Honda has one in storage in Japan.

Do You Know the Way to Monterey? Martin Swig and friends know several ways, and made a rally out of them

Sun, 14 Aug 2011

One of the best things about the Monterey week is driving to it. Thanks to plate tectonics, California has some of the best roads in the world. No one knows those roads better than Martin Swig, professor emeritus of the School of Piston Knocks.