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Cardone Industries 54-73199 Brake Booster Remanufactured Vacuum Replacement Each on 2040-parts.com

US $114.97
Location:

Tallmadge, Ohio, US

Tallmadge, Ohio, US
Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Refund will be given as:Money Back Item must be returned within:60 Days Return policy details:Items may be returned within 90-days or purchase for a refund or exchange, if in new and unused condition. Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Restocking Fee:No Brand:Cardone Industries Manufacturer Part Number:54-73199

One Lap of the Web: Let's visit Amelia Island in a short bus camper

Tue, 04 Mar 2014

-- Ken Kesey and friends spent most of the countercultural 1960s driving across the country in a 1939 International Harvester school bus painted in psychedelic colors. Portland, Maine architect Will Winkelman might do less drugs (we don't know), but the 1959 Chevrolet Viking short bus he designed might fit Kesey and his Merry Pranksters, especially if you stacked them head-to-toe. For his client, Winkelman designed a Moroccan theme of colorful patterns and textures across the curtains and twin beds, beaded light fixtures and wood paneling everywhere, approaching the project as one might approach boat-building or a particularly run-down Detroit "fixer-upper." The result has plumbing, power, an olive-drab paint scheme that blends into the New England woods, and the overall sense of a guest bedroom that you can escape in whenever you tire of your host's company.

Win a ride in the Honda FCX Clarity fuel cell

Thu, 09 Sep 2010

CAR has a rather special eco treat to offer to one lucky reader – a chance to ride in Honda’s FCX Clarity. Not heard of the FCX Clarity? Well you should have because it’s the world’s first serious hydrogen-powered car (only water is emitted from the exhaust) and a few lucky Californians and Japanese currently get to lease one as part of Honda’s research, even though they’re worth about £1m each.

Hongik University wins 2011 Ferrari World Design Contest

Tue, 19 Jul 2011

Seoul's Hongik University scooped first place honors in the 2011 Ferrari World Design Contest. 50 highly prestigious universities developed designs for Ferrari's cars of the future, and students from the Korean school beat the second-placed Istituto Europeo di Design (IED) of Turin, Italy, in the final while London's Royal College of Arts (RCA) finished in third place. The ‘Eternità', developed by Kim Cheong Ju, Ahn Dre and Lee Sahngseok, was the winning design for Hongik University, while Azerbaijan's Samir Sadikhov, studying at IED, earned him second place with the ‘Xezri'.