Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Centric 111.07520 Parking Brake Shoe on 2040-parts.com

US $31.44
Location:

Salt Lake City, Utah, US

Salt Lake City, Utah, US
Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Refund will be given as:Money Back Item must be returned within:14 Days Return policy details:Items must be returned in original packaging in salable condition. Any item that has been installed can not be returned. Refunds will be issued once the merchandise is received. Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Restocking Fee:No Part Brand:CENTRIC Manufacturer Part Number:111.07520 SME:_2317 Placement on Vehicle:Rear

Subaru XV gets a price cut – down by £1300 on 1.6 litre versions

Sat, 18 May 2013

It wasn’t a bad starting point for an able mid-sized crossover – a high-riding Impreza, in all but name –  but it wasn’t the cheapest offering in the class. But now, with the Yen being a bit kinder to Japanese car makers, Subaru has decided to nudge the price a bit lower to start the XV range off below £20k for the first time. The price drop for the XV only applies to the 1.6 litre petrol versions, but you can now get the entry-level XV 1.6i S for a more affordable £19,995 rising to £23,415 for the XV 1.6i SE with the Lineartronic gearbox, reductions across the range of £1300.

Bruce Weiner Micro Car auction: Day two wrap and results

Fri, 22 Feb 2013

With the crowd shuffling out of the Bruce Weiner Micro Car Museum after day one of RM's sale, Autoweek contributor Dave Kinney looked over to RM's Ian Kelleher and complimented him on a strong first day. Kelleher smirked and said that he expected that day two would be even better. He was right.

Cadillac ATS and Tesla Model S make final five in Innovation By Design Award's 'Transportation' category

Fri, 27 Sep 2013

Cadillac's ATS and the Tesla Model S are among the five finalists bidding to win the ‘Transportation' category at this year's Innovation by Design Awards, which celebrates groundbreaking designs from the past year. Established last year by design magazine Fast Company, the awards consist of eight different categories – 2D Design, Products, Interactive Experience, Transportation, Spaces, Social Good, Concepts and Student Design – and this year saw over 1,200 submissions from all over the world, from corporations all the way down to individuals' designs. After a jury of 24 experts from all design disciplines – including J Mays, Ford's vice president of design and chief creative officer – whittled them down to just 54 designs, the Cadillac ATS and the Tesla Model S are battling for their category award against three other designs from 2013.