Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Acdelco Professional 36-362190 Steering Return Hose-power Steering Return Hose on 2040-parts.com

US $19.34
Location:

Brooklyn, New York, US

Brooklyn, New York, US
Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Refund will be given as:Money back or exchange (buyer's choice) Item must be returned within:30 Days Return policy details:Return policy:Parts returned in original condition as shipped will receive a full refund,not including shipping. All shipping to and from the buyer is solely the buyers responsibility.Parts returned damaged or torn will not be considered for return. Cores broken or deemed un-rebuild-able at our discretion will not be considered for return credit. Must be returned in original carton. Electrical items cannot be returned, No exceptions Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Restocking Fee:No Part Brand:ACDELCO PROFESSIONAL Manufacturer Part Number:36-362190 SME:_3273

Aston Martin adds a V8 Vantage S

Tue, 25 Jan 2011

Slotted between Aston Martin's vaunted V8 Vantage and the venerable V12 variant comes a tweener model that promises to be anything but vague: Aston is adding the S variant, with more power and an upgraded transmission. The Vantage S draws power from the 4.7-liter V8 making 430 hp, 10 hp more than in the base Vantage. The S also adds 15 lb-ft of torque, boosting total twist to 361 lb-ft.

Court order BANS publication of VW’s Luxury car security codes

Tue, 30 Jul 2013

Bentley is just one of VW’s marques whose security has been compromised There have been plenty of stories around in recent years of car makers’ security systems being easily hacked by spotty boys with a laptop, and now a scientist at Birmingham University has cracked VW’s Megamos Crypto system that protects cars like Bentley and Porsche. Flavia Garcia has cracked the code that transmits between VW’s luxury cars – like Bentleys and Porsches – and the key fob, which potentially fatally compromises VW’s security. Garcia had planned to publish his paper on the fatal flaws in the Megamos Crypto system at the Usenix Security Symposium in Washington next month, but a judge has put the kybosh on that.

Worth a read: Wired's 'Why Getting It Wrong Is the Future of Design'

Thu, 25 Sep 2014

Wired has just published a series of short articles entitled 13 Lessons for Design's New Golden Age. While there are some interesting examples cited in the piece, the concluding article, ‘Why Getting It Wrong Is the Future of Design' by the former creative director of Wired magazine, Scott Dadich, feels like it has particular resonance for car design. Dadich's Wrong Theory uses disruptive examples from the world of art, plus his own experience of working at Wired, to explain how design goes through phases: establishing a direction, creating a set of rules that define that direction and finally someone who dares to break from that direction.