Airtex 1t1073 Engine Coolant Temperature Switch on 2040-parts.com
Sioux City, Iowa, US
Switches / Controls for Sale
- Airtex 1s3535 hvac blower control switch(US $51.99)
- 90 94 talon eclipse chrysler laser fog light lights lamps & dash dimmer control(US $19.00)
- 99 00 01 oldsmobile alero grand am turn signal headlight switches malibu(US $20.00)
- 99 00 01 02 03 04 oldsmobile alero climate controls heater ac(US $15.00)
- 99 00 01 02 03 04 oldsmobile alero back door power window switches four door(US $10.00)
- Range rover p38a heater ac climate control panel 95 96 97 98 99 00-02(US $169.50)
Celebrate 40 years of Nissan's Z car with our special Web-zine
Fri, 16 Apr 2010It's the 40th anniversary of Nissan's iconic Z car. You can join the celebration with a special-edition Web-zine created by the editors of AutoWeek. A great historical compilation from the AW archives, this special issue will take you from the Fairlady to the latest 370Z, with the race cars in between.
News watch March 2012: today's auto industry news
Fri, 30 Mar 2012Welcome to CAR Magazine's news aggregator as we round up the daily stories in the auto industry. Top tip: news summaries are added from the top hour-by-hour Friday 30 March 2012• Fiat is suffering from its decision to suspend new product innovation during the recession, argues ANE. It is losing ground on account of delays to its Punto range, which won't be replaced until 2014, and the ageing Bravo, which was launched in 2007 and has no successor in sight (Automotive News Europe)• Mercedes plans to build the new four-door coupe spun off the A- and B-class architecture at its new Hungarian factory (Automotive News Europe)• Opel denies rumours it may sell the Eisenach factory in east Germany where it builds the Corsa supermini (Automotive News Europe)• Mercedes is cutting the time it takes to build a car from 43 hours in 2008 to nearer 30 hours by 2015, according to production boss Wolfgang Bernhard.
Top Gear 'for inner nine-yea-old'
Tue, 28 Jan 2014THE BOSS of BBC hit Top Gear says the presenters' childish antics are a success because they are a "release valve" for the increasing stresses of our working lives. Executive producer Andy Wilman said the programmes helped viewers to reconnect with their nine-year-old selves because life for adults is "bloody hard". In an interview with Radio Times, he also bemoaned the constraints of the workplace, which could be seen as a swipe at the strict levels of compliance which apply to BBC TV shows.