99-03 Mitsubishi Galant Left Driver Side Rear Quarter Door Glass Window Oem on 2040-parts.com
Morgantown, Kentucky, US
Up for Sale Left Rear / Driver Side Rear Quarter Window Glass. It was removed from a 2002 Mitsubishi Galant in good used condition.
Will fit 1999-2003 Mitsubishi Galant.
Auto Glass for Sale
- 99-03 mitsubishi galant left driver side rear door glass window oem(US $80.00)
- 99-03 mitsubishi galant right passenger side rear door glass window oem(US $80.00)
- 99-03 mitsubishi galant right passenger side front door glass window oem(US $80.00)
- Tri-vent three panel slider with solar glass for 1998+ nissan frontier(US $174.88)
- 96" rigid channel for 1951-1954 chevy and gmc trucks division bar(US $51.70)
- 1998 jeep grand cherokee zj - rear lift / hatch glass (glass and hardware) tint(US $85.00)
Spring Mountain opens Cadillac V-Series Academy
Tue, 29 Jan 2013While half the country is slogging through snow this time of year, some of you -- like Cadillac -- are prepping for the racetrack. The Cadillac V-Series Academy at Nevada’s Spring Mountain Resort and Country Club is now open to the public. The resort, just outside Las Vegas, has four miles of racetrack and 125 feet of elevation change.
Mercedes GLA – the new A Class SUV/Crossover – caught on video
Wed, 19 Dec 2012The small Mercedes SUV / Crossover based on the new A Class – the Mercedes GLA – has been caught on video out testing. Mercedes already has a hit on its hands with the new A Class (it’s sold 100,000 already) but there are more variants of the new A Class to come including the new CLA – the baby CLS – and the car we have here – the Mercedes GLA SUV / Crossover. Based on the same platform as the new A Class, the GLA is a new Mercedes niche aimed at the growing compact SUV market, just like the new Volvo V40 Cross Country.
One Lap of the Web: Motel kitsch, Bentley dragsters and rusting Porsches
Fri, 23 May 2014-- The roach motel lives on in these postcards from Petrolicious. The Googie signs and modernist architecture jump from the Howard Johnsons and Travelodges of the 1950s, when buildings were built in color. For a precious few decades in the tapestry of American interstate travel, before they became the refuge of schlocky horror movies, the motor hotel was the true King of the Road.