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Alloy Usa 21142 Alloy Usa; Axle Shaft Fits 03-05 Wrangler (tj) on 2040-parts.com

US $187.35
Location:

San Diego, California, United States

San Diego, California, United States
Condition:New Brand:Alloy USA Surface Finish:Brand New Manufacturer Part Number:21142 Warranty:Yes Interchange Part Number:Axle Shaft Country/Region of Manufacture:India Other Part Number:21142 Axle Shaft Seller SKU:BKWL21142

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Kia Picanto (2011): more pics and spec

Tue, 25 Jan 2011

Kia has published some engine details and new photos of its replacement 2011 Picanto, which goes on sale in late spring. The new Picanto will be unveiled at the 2011 Geneva motor show on 1 March. It's a bigger model than the outgoing city car - the longer wheelbase liberating a quarter more boot space to answer criticisms of a cramped luggage bay.

Toyota Hydrogen Fuel Cell on sale by 2015 at €100k

Tue, 08 Nov 2011

The 2003 Toyota Fine S Hydrogen FCEV Toyota has done a great job of turning the car buying public on to alternative powertrains with it Hybrid setup in the Prius, and now it plans to go the same route with a hydrogen-powered production Toyota. Despite Toyota’s headline commitment to hybrid cars, it has been beavering away for a long time with fuel cell technology for its cars. The photo at the top is of the 2003 Toyota Fine-S Concept which was developed to test the fledgeling hydrogen fuel cell setup, and Toyota were running fuel cell cars in Japan and California at this time too, although not, as far as we know, the Fine S.

McLaren SLR Edition revealed

Mon, 06 Dec 2010

McLaren SLR Edition A year ago – almost to the day – we reported that the very last McLaren SLR had rolled off the production line (well, production floor is more like it at McLaren) and that McLaren and Mercedes were going their own ways – McLaren with the McLaren MP4-12C and Mercedes with the Mercedes SLS AMG. The swansong for the SLR was the SLR Stirling Moss, an SLR dressed up like a silver arrow car from the 1930s, without a roof and only a vestigial windscreen. Or at least we we believed the Stirling Moss was the last SLR.