Brand New Oem Rear Seat Back Hinge 2004-2007 Ford Focus # 1s4z-54613b91-ab on 2040-parts.com
Cranston, Rhode Island, US
Seats for Sale
- Toyota fj40 land cruiser front bench seats 1972(US $900.00)
- 2001 mercedes benz w220 s500 rear seat power head rest grey leather genuine oem(US $34.99)
- Corvette seats 78-82 pace car style, free shipping(US $745.00)
- Bmw oem 52207319686 rear seat-anchor cover(US $22.40)
- 2005 nissan maxima front rh gray cloth seat bottom/cushion assembly 87300-za462(US $249.99)
- 2006-2012 honda civic sedan gray leather bucket (US $120.00)
MINI Countryman Cooper & Paceman Cooper get ALL4 4WD
Mon, 03 Jun 2013The MINI Countryman Cooper (pictured) & Paceman Cooper get ALL4 4WD We always find it astonishing that car makers ‘ration’ the availability of four wheel drive platforms in their cars, usually citing a ‘lack of demand’. But that lack of demand is usually predicated on the lack of supply, and increasing the supply of 4WD cars would see more sold, especially after a series of harsh winters where many motorists struggled to keep their cars in a straight line. So the decision by BMW to extend the availability of their ALL4 4WD setup to a wider range of MINIs is welcome, with the petrol Countryman Cooper and Paceman Cooper now getting the ALL4 option too.
Hyundai HND-9 Concept at Seoul Motor Show
Thu, 21 Mar 2013The Hyundai HND-9 is a concept coupe from Hyundai, heading for the Seoul Motor Show at the end of March, and probably previews the next Genesis Coupe. The Hyundai HND-9 is, according to Hyundai, the ‘Latest luxury sports coupe’, which we assume means the HND-9 is pointing at the next generation Genesis Coupe, a car we don’t (yet) get in the UK. The HND-9 gets an evolution of Hyundai’s fluidic design (although, unlike the latest Santa Fe where Hyundai decided the new design was called ‘Storm’, the HND-9′s design doesn’t get a name) which Hyundai say is a modern reinterpretation of an elegant classic premium sports coupe.
This could be your first autonomous vehicle
Thu, 09 Jan 2014While Google's autonomous fleet of robot cars prowls Silicon Valley and gets all the press, the first, or one of the first, truly autonomous vehicles you may ride in could be something like this: The humble, people-moving Navia. Developed by a French company called Induct, the Navia is ringed with laser beams (not frickin' laser beams. Ed.) that help it navigate through city streets or college campuses without the aid of a track in the ground, a rail or even GPS (GPS is not accurate enough, Induct says).