Altrom Imports Atm Tg2908 - Thermostat O-ring on 2040-parts.com
Chino, California, US
Other Parts for Sale
- Altrom imports atm tg2906 - thermostat o-ring(US $3.75)
- Altrom imports atm tg2905 - thermostat o-ring(US $4.65)
- Altrom imports atm tb4223 - belt - camshaft / timing(US $31.60)
- Altrom imports atm tb4221 - belt - camshaft / timing(US $67.15)
- Altrom imports atm tb4217 - belt - camshaft / timing(US $36.10)
- Altrom imports atm tb4216 - belt - camshaft / timing(US $38.35)
New Hyundai i30 goes on sale in the UK
Mon, 12 Mar 2012The new Hyundai i300 arrives in Hyundai UK Showrooms The new Hyundai i30 (2012) was revealed at last year’s Frankfurt Motor Show and has now arrived in Hyundai UK showrooms. It seems like a long time since Hyundai revealed the new i30 at the Frankfurt Motor Show, but it’s actually only six months; time enough to get the news out before the new i30 lands in showrooms, which it does in the UK from today. In many ways the new Hyundai i30 is the most convincing model yet from Hyundai’s increasingly confident offerings, and looks set to go head to head with VW and Ford for the hearts and minds of family car buyers in the UK.
Frankfurt 2011: VW Nils EV Go-Kart Video
Sat, 17 Sep 2011VW Nils revealed at Frankfurt There have been quite a few of these very small, go-kart-style urban commuter cars cropping up of late, but perhaps the Volkswagen Nils is the most promising. The most promising because if – and it’s a very big if – commuters take to the idea of a grown-up version of a soap-box Kart with an engine for getting to work, the VW Nils will possibly offer the best combination of practicality, refinement and cost. Yes, there’s the Audi Urban Concept to consider, but that will be more expensive (there’s a reason Audi makes VW 40% of its profits), so if commuters do actually find appeal in this route then the Nils is probably the front-runner.
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.