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Black Skull Levers For Harley Davidson Dresser Road King Road Street Glide 96-10 on 2040-parts.com

US $12.50
Location:

Pomona, California, US

Pomona, California, US
Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Item must be returned within:30 Days Refund will be given as:Money Back Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Return policy details:A full refund, less shipping charges, will be issued for products returned to us in saleable condition within 30 days. Buyers are responsible for the return shipping fee. We cannot accept returns on final sale/sold as is/used merchandise, vehicles, trailers, engines or on items damaged through normal wear and tear. Please see the item description for details.***Free shipping ***If your order was shipped for free or at a promotional shipping rate, you will incur the actual "to and from" Fedex/Freight charges upon returning merchandise. Restocking Fee:No Placement on Vehicle:Array Surface Finish:Black

Handle Bars, Levers, Mirrors for Sale

The AutoWeek list: Foolish cars we should never have bought, but did

Wed, 01 Apr 2009

2001 Pontiac Aztek Our take: The most recent black eye to the General's style department. A car equivalent of the ubiquitous camel design, put together by a committee whose members obviously didn't speak to each other. 1999 Isuzu VehiCROSS Our take: We don't doubt this Japanese ute's off-road prowess, but its goggle-eye front and corrugated steel door ripples were enormous design miscues.

Celebrity spotting at the 2013 Los Angeles Motor Show

Thu, 21 Nov 2013

Los Angeles ain't called Tinseltown for nothing. It's probably the most celebrity-filled place on the planet - so it's no surprise that lots of well-known stars dropped in on the 2013 Los Angeles Motor Show. We saw dozens of names at the LA show, including world sprint champion Usain Bolt, who moonlights as Nissan's director of excitement when he's not smashing world records on the atheletics track.

Chevrolet Volt uses parts made from oil-collecting booms

Tue, 21 Dec 2010

General Motors is transforming about 100 miles of boom material used to soak up oil in the Gulf of Mexico into auto parts for the Chevrolet Volt. The oil-soaked plastic material collected off the Alabama and Louisiana coasts will keep more than 100,000 pounds of waste from the nation's landfills. The project is expected to make enough plastic to supply the first-year production of Volts with plastic parts for under the hood.