Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Carlyle Hand Tools Cht Cwfp110 - Wrench, Combination Sae; 5/16""; 12; Full Po... on 2040-parts.com

US $8.03
Location:

Chino, California, US

Chino, California, US
Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Item must be returned within:30 Days Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Refund will be given as:Money Back Restocking Fee:No Alternate:CHT CWFP110 Brand:Carlyle Hand Tools # Points on Wrench:12 Style Name:Combination SAE Wrench Finish:Full Polish Wrench Length:5 3/8"" Wrench Size:5/16"" Contents:(1) Wrench Material Type:Heat Treated Chrome Vanadium

Other Parts for Sale

AutoWeek Best of the Best 2011: Cadillac CTS-V Coupe, Jeep Grand Cherokee

Thu, 06 Jan 2011

Several decades have passed since we handed out an award whereby AutoWeek editors picked the best new vehicles in a given model year. We've dabbled in things such as "America's Best," when we've asked you--our faithful, opinionated and knowledgeable followers--to vote on the best vehicle in certain categories. We drive hundreds of vehicles each year (including all of the newest hardware), report the cold, hard facts and give you our opinions about which vehicles are worth your consideration when the time comes to make one of life's biggest purchases.

CAR journalist wins top award

Fri, 21 Dec 2007

By Ben Pulman Motor Industry 21 December 2007 08:42 CAR's associate editor Tim Pollard has won the industry's Journalist of the Year award 2007. He scooped the prestigious gong at the annual Guild of Motoring Writers awards ceremony at the RAC Club in London for his magazine scoop on the McLaren P11 (the cover story of CAR October 2007). The judges praised Pollard's investigative journalism, which uncovered a dossier of facts, sketches and details of the new junior supercar from the Woking road car and racing specialist.

Toyota outlines quality reforms; chief bows out of U.S. hearings

Wed, 17 Feb 2010

Conceding that breakneck expansion led to Toyota Motor Corp.'s current recall crisis, president Akio Toyoda outlined reforms meant to get quality back on track, including more active use of the car's so-called black box crash data recorder. Toyoda, grandson of the carmaker's founder, also indicated he won't sit before Congressional hearings into the quality lapses that have triggered recalls of more than 8.5 million vehicles since last fall. Yoshimi Inaba, the head of Toyota's U.S.