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97 98 99 00 01 02 03 04 Ford F150 Rear Drive Shaft 120 Wb M.t. 4x2 Id F65w-la on 2040-parts.com

US $169.00
Location:

San Antonio, Texas, US

San Antonio, Texas, US
Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Refund will be given as:Money Back Item must be returned within:30 Days Return policy details:Item is eligible for return only under conditions described in "Guarantee and Returns" section of this item description and eBay buyer protection policies. No returns for items purchased by mistake would be accepted. No refunds on deposits, grade "C" parts or parts described as "not functional". Return shipping charges are paid by the buyer in any and all cases. Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Restocking Fee:No Inventory ID:18519 Interchange Part Number:431-04260 Year:1997 Model:FORD F150 Stock Number:DT1290 Mileage:198893 Conditions and Options:MAN 4.2L REG/CAB Genuine OEM:YES Brand:FORD TRUCK Part Number:18519

Whos Where: Hakan Saracoglu appointed design director of Chery's Shanghai studio

Thu, 20 Dec 2012

Hakan Saracoglu has been appointed director of Chery Motor's Shanghai design facility. He will work alongside director of corporate design James Hope who continues in his role overseeing Chery design. Turkish-born Saracoglu joins the Chinese state-owned manufacturer from Porsche where he worked from April 1998.

Mazda to use regen brakes to boost fuel economy 5 to 10 percent

Mon, 09 Jul 2012

Mazda is adding a fuel-saving technology that harnesses wasted brake energy in the redesigned Mazda6 sedan due early next year. The approach uses regenerative braking to convert kinetic energy into electricity that is stored in a capacitor. The car later taps that capacitor to power the fuel pump, lights, audio, air conditioning and transmission and engine control systems.

EU cuts Co2 Targets to help Euro car makers

Tue, 02 Dec 2008

In an astonishing outbreak of common sense, EU negotiators last night agreed a deal to ease the draconian Co2 targets for EU car manufacturers. Originally, EU car makers had to meet the new regulations by 2012, but have now won a concession to hit 65% of target by 2012, 75% by 2013, 80% by 2014 and 100% by 2015. This scaling back of the targets was achieved after Germany objected to the original proposals.