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98 Dodge Dakota Parking Brake Assembly ( No Cable ) on 2040-parts.com

US $50.00
Location:

Rochester, Minnesota, US

Rochester, Minnesota, US
Returns Accepted:ReturnsNotAccepted Warranty:No

98 DODGE DAKOTA PARKING BRAKE ASSEMBLY ( NO CABLE ) .    Buyer to pay for shipping.    Thanks for looking.

The great Tesla bubble of 2013

Thu, 03 Oct 2013

Do I go too far out on a limb to suggest Tesla is the modern-day version of the Great Tulip Bubble of March 1637? Remember, that was when speculators drove prices of just-introduced tulip bulbs to astronomical heights. Some single bulbs cost more than 10 times an average working man's salary.

Onyx Concept to feature Range Rover Aspen Ultimate Series at SEMA

Wed, 30 Oct 2013

Irish tuning firm Onyx Concept will be taking its lineup of cars to SEMA, and we have a feeling the company's Range Rover Aspen Ultimate Series will fit right in in Las Vegas. Onyx Concept is not as old as the old as some of the other European tuning houses, but they've already made waves with their the tuning programs for the cars that they have offered. The Range Rover Aspen Ultimate Series is not going to be all show and no go, even though we have to admit that we didn't think it was going to be easy to improve upon the supercharged Range Rover's stock output of 505 hp.

UK's emergency Budget 2010: how it affects motorists

Mon, 21 Jun 2010

Chancellor George Osborne will make the emergency spending cuts on Tuesday 22 June By Tim Pollard Motoring Issues 21 June 2010 09:51 The new UK Government's emergency Budget tomorrow is likely to announce a raft of spending cuts and tax rises bound to affect motorists.  The new Conservative-Liberal coalition government is taking the unusual step of holding an emergency summer Budget to reduce the national deficit, which stood at £156bn in 2009-10. The senior Cabinet members signed off the details of the Budget on Friday, but the details won't be confirmed until Tuesday 22 June 2010.Here's our preview of what to expect if you're a car owner:VAT riseMost pundits agree that the rate of value added tax will rise from today's 17.5%. If raised to 20% – the upper limit expected – it could raise an extra £11 billion a year for Government coffers.