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Airtex 5s1069 Air Charged Temperature Sensor on 2040-parts.com

US $54.33
Location:

Saddle Brook, New Jersey, US

Saddle Brook, New Jersey, US
Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Refund will be given as:Money Back Item must be returned within:30 Days Return policy details:Return Standards: Our policies apply to all returns. You must contact us to obtain authorization prior to making any type of return. *** New Item Returns can be made up to 30 days after order delivery date. *** New Item Returns will not be exchanged, a separate order must be placed for other merchandise. *** New Item or Unauthorized Returns are subject to a 10% restocking fee and a fair shipping charge. *** New Item Returns received back in non-original packaging or in unsellable condition are non-refundable. *** Items returned from non-delivery are handled exactly as New Item Returns. *** Non-Fit Item Returns are handled on a case-by-case basis. We ask that all vehicle information be provided with these return inquiries. *** Defective Item Returns are handled on a case-by-case basis and are supported by a default 90 day policy. Defective coverage after this period will be subject to being handled the best we can with what was provided by our manufacturer supplier. Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Restocking Fee:No SME:_3128 Brand:Airtex Manufacturer Part Number:5S1069

Volkswagen XL1 ‘Super’ Hybrid heading for the UK – costs £98,515

Mon, 30 Jun 2014

The Volkswagen XL1 ‘Super’ Hybrid (pictured) costs £98,515 in the UK VW announced a while back that their ‘super’ hybrid XL1 was going in to limited production, although they didn’t confirm a price for being super green. But now the first XL1 has already been delivered in Germany, Volkswagen has confirmed a chunk of the 200 run – thought to be between 20 and 30 cars – will be making their way to the UK and will cost £98,515. For almost £100k, there are plenty of options bordering on supercar, but the XL1 is ‘super’ in a different way, and if extreme economy and a design that looks like something imagined as a car of the future in Hollywood Sci-Fi films of the 1930s floats your boat, the XL1 could be the car you’re looking for.

Algae-powered street lights eat CO2

Fri, 04 May 2012

Algae powered street lighting (great Photoshop) A French biochemist – Pierre Calleja – has developed a street lighting system using micro algae that absorbs CO2. The need to reduce CO2 in the atmosphere is contentious - to say the least – but as long as governments use CO2 as a stick to beat motorists and empty their bank accounts it’s sensible to look at ways of ‘balancing’ the CO2 emissions of cars. French biochemist Pierre Calleja thinks he’s come up with a solution that would neutralise CO2 emissions from cars by cancelling it out with his micro-algae lighting.

Europe inches towards CO2 deal

Mon, 24 Nov 2008

By Tim Pollard Motor Industry 24 November 2008 17:29 The European Union is close to agreement on a radically lower CO2 limit to apply to all new cars, diplomats indicated today. The EU’s 27 governments are set to agree a Europe-wide limit of 130g/km as a new-car average by 2015, according to sources in Brussels. The deal is likely to start from 2012, with full compliance three years later.