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Anaheim Angels Decal Custom Cars Trucks Tailgates Laptop Bumper Stickers 2x on 2040-parts.com

US $13.95
Location:

Victorville, California, US

Victorville, California, US
Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Restocking Fee:No Item must be returned within:14 Days Refund will be given as:Money back or exchange (buyer's choice) Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Return policy details:We strive to provide excellent customer service, however,if situation ever occurs that buyer claims that the item purchased is not as described or did not function properly after receiving the item, Buyer agrees to return the product to the seller to validate if the item purchased is indeed defective or faulty. Seller will not send any replacement of the product if the buyer fails to follow the terms described. Thank you for your understanding. Country of Manufacture:United States

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Autoweek in review: What you may have missed

Fri, 24 Feb 2012

Our friends over at Bring a Trailer found an found an unmodified fourth-generation Toyota Supra Turbo, which is almost as good as a priceless barn find that everyone only hears about but never sees. Check out the article, and the arguments over stock versus modified. Executive editor Roger Hart left in the new Dodge Charger SRT8 Super Bee but returned empty-handed.

Citroën C-Elysée & Citroën C4 L

Wed, 20 Jun 2012

The Citroën C-Elysée & Citroën C4 L are two new Citroens aimed at budget compact saloon buyers in emerging markets. The biggest car market in the world is actually the compact saloon, even if Europe, and particularly the UK, has taken to the hatch and compact SUV instead. We recently had the Peugeot 301 arrive as an offering for more budget-minded car buyers in countries like Turkey, Eastern Europe, Russia, Ukraine, Greece, Middle East and Africa, and the new Citroen C-Elysée is the Citroen take on the same objective.

Are laser-powered cars in our future?

Thu, 01 Sep 2011

We have no shortage of ideas here in the United States about how to power our cars. We’ve seen gasoline and electricity, and we’ve heard about fuel cells powered by water. The nuclear option is the only thing left to discuss.