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93-98 Toyota T100 Rear Lamp Tail Light Passenger Right on 2040-parts.com

US $35.90
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 Interchange Part Number:TO2819102 Warranty:Yes Manufacturer Part Number:TO2819102

Who's Where: High-profile re-organization at General Motors

Mon, 18 Jun 2012

General Motors' design division has been re-organized in a spate of high-profile restructuring that comes into effect on 1 August. In Europe, David Lyon replaces Mark Adams as Vice President of Design for Opel/Vauxhall in Rüsselsheim while Adams moves Stateside to become Executive Director, Global Cadillac and Buick Design. Ken Parkinson, currently Director North American Exterior Design/Global Architecture Strategy and Chevrolet Brand Champion will become Executive Director, Global Chevrolet and GMC Design.

Noble M600 Roadster Revealed – but you can’t have one

Tue, 26 Jun 2012

Noble Automotive has released an image of a convertible M600, but has no plans to produce it at present. The Noble M600 is an impressive supercar from one of the UK’s most interesting ‘Garden Shed’ supercar builders, even if it’s gestation period seems to have been ten times that of an elephant. The M600 ‘arrived’ in 2009 ready to rock and roll, or so we thought, but then seemed to disappear again.

Semi-autonomous driving system reduces accidents by 75% [w/video]

Thu, 19 Jul 2012

Scientists from MIT have developed a semi-autonomous driving system that is proven to reduce acccidents by 75 per cent. A front-mounted camera and laser range-finder identify the car's surroundings while making realtime updates to distances, mapping out the car's movement into 'safe zones'. The system also asseses the vehicle's limits, such as grip, and corrects the car.