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94 95 96 97 Toyota Celica Starter Motor 7afe Engine St 1.4kw 236446 on 2040-parts.com

US $48.76
Location:

Greenville, South Carolina, United States

Greenville, South Carolina, United States
Condition:Used Conditions & Options:1.8,5SP PartNumber:604 Genuine OEM:Yes Mileage:0 Interchange Part Number:604-58475B Model:CELICA Inventory ID:236446 Year:1996 Designation:Used GTIN:Does not apply Stock #:AA3568

Starter Parts for Sale

2013 Ford Kuga goes in to production

Mon, 03 Dec 2012

The new (2013) Ford Kuga crossover – which debuted at Geneva in the Spring – has now gone in to production in Spain ahead of first customer car deliveries. Ford has announced it’s finally started to churn out the new Kuga at its plant in Valencia, and that the Kuga will be heading to Ford’s UK showrooms to get customer cars out in the new year. Despite starting production of the new Kuga, Ford still hasn’t come up with prices for its compact crossover, but says they will be available before the end of the year. On offer in the new Kuga is a range of new technology including the kick-to-open tailgate, Active Park Assist, Blind Spot Monitoring Torque Vectoring Control, SYNC and the first use of Ford’s EcoBoost engines in the Kuga (although no sign yet that the 1.0 litre EcoBoost will be added to the Kuga).

Saab is sold again: two Chinese makers buy Saab

Fri, 28 Oct 2011

Chinese car makers Pang Da and Youngman today agreed to buy Saab in its entirety from Swedish Automobile. It's the latest extraordinary twist in the saga of Saab, which has been technically bankrupt since September 2011 and built just 11,000 cars this year. The deal, which will see the Chinese car makers pay €100 million for Saab, has not yet however been signed and sealed.

New car sales up 7.9 per cent in May (2012) – Vauxhall Corsa best-seller

Fri, 08 Jun 2012

New car sales jumped 7.9 per cent in May 2012 compared to a year ago and the Vauxhall Corsa ousted the Ford Fiesta as top seller. Yes, we’re still in the depths of a recession and the Eurozone is in meltdown. Banks aren’t lending money and everyone’s tightening their belts.