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89-95 Toyota Pickup Led Tail Lights Rear Brake Lamps on 2040-parts.com

US $137.90
Location:

Ontario, California, US

Ontario, California, US
Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Refund will be given as:Money Back Item must be returned within:14 Days Return policy details:Buyers must notify us within 7 days from the delivered date to obtain RMA #, packages without RMA # will be refused for return. We must receive the items within 14 days from their delivered date to process refunds. All items must be returned in the original condition, INCLUDING THE ORIGINAL BOX. Buyers are responsible for shipping-and-insurance fees (or restocking fees for free-shipping items) of all returns unless stated otherwise. Please refer to the main product page for details. Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Restocking Fee:No Warranty:Yes

Who's Where: Frank Stephenson to move to Fiat

Tue, 22 Feb 2005

Frank Stephenson, Director of Ferrari-Maserati Concept Design and Development, is to move to Fiat to become Head of the Fiat, Lancia and Commercial Vehicle Styling Centre, based in Turin. Fiat Auto has seen a number of senior management changes within the last week, as part of an overall restructuring of the group. These include the appointment of Karl Heinz Kalbfell, Chief Operating Officer of Alfa Romeo, who is to become Chief Executive Officer of Maserati and replace Martin Leach who is now leaving the Company.

London's GPS-based speed-limit trial puts Big Brother's foot on the gas pedal

Wed, 08 Jul 2009

A fleet of 12 Toyota Priuses in London have been fitted with GPS-linked speed limiters to measure how drivers respond to having their speed controlled by a computer rather than their own feet. For now, the trial is local to London, run by Transport for London, the agency that manages the city's roads, buses, subways and trains. The agency is using its own fleet of Priuses for the test and will add a bus and a taxi later this year.

Electric cars produce MORE CO2 than petrol or diesel cars

Tue, 26 Mar 2013

Rather than offering a low CO2 alternative to the internal combustion engine, it seems electric cars start their life with an extra 40,000 miles worth of CO2 already on the clock. Despite bribes from governments around the world to get car buyers to buy in to electric cars, they’ve been a flop. But that’s not surprising.