Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

55-87 Gm Parking Emergency Brake Cable Clip Clips Retainer Hold Down 3 Piece on 2040-parts.com

US $9.95
Location:

Caribou, Maine, United States

Caribou, Maine, United States
Condition:New

55-87 GM Parking Emergency Brake Cable Clip Clips Retainer Hold Down 3 piece Chevy Camaro Chevelle Nova Inpala Pontiac Oldsmobile
You get 3 clips

Crunch watch Nov 09: the auto industry in crisis

Mon, 30 Nov 2009

Welcome to CAR's news aggregator as we round up the seismic change in the auto industry. Top tip: news summaries are added from the top hour-by-hour Monday 30 November 2009• Saab's future is likely to become clearer tomorrow when the GM board meets in Detroit. It will have to decide whether to seek a new buyer or put Saab into liquidation (Financial Times)• Don't rule out an eastern bid for Saab: Beijing Automotive is still interested in buying the Swedish car maker despite its joint bid with Koenigsegg hitting the rocks, reports Automotive News.

Honda's future: small cars, no NSX or Euro Acura

Fri, 23 Oct 2009

Honda CRZ concept at the 2009 Tokyo motor show; one of the cars unveiled by Honda CEO Takanobu Ito By Ben Pulman Motor Industry 23 October 2009 11:22 Honda chief executive Takanobu Ito today spelled out his vision for the next decade at Honda to CAR Online. No successor to the NSX is under development, but there will be a smaller city car slotting under the Jazz in Honda's range. It will be launched in Asia at first, potentially following in the rest of the world.Ito, who is also president of Honda R&D, said that the company had no firm plans for a pure battery electric vehicle at this stage – the onus is on hybrid petrol electric cars and fuel-cell models.It will continue to develop diesels for Europe, but Ito admitted a project to build clean-fuel diesels for the US market had been cancelled.

AT&T launches campaign against texting and driving

Tue, 28 Dec 2010

AT&T has launched an 11-minute video designed to augment its anti-texting-and-driving campaign launched in March. The video is intended to reach consumers before New Year's Eve. Called "The Last Text," the video tells stories about people whose lives were adversely affected by texting while driving, including the parents of Mariah West, who died after texting "Where u at?" to a friend.