Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Centric 120.62081 Front Brake Rotor/disc-premium Rotor-preferred on 2040-parts.com

US $92.25
Location:

Chino, California, US

Chino, California, US
Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Refund will be given as:Money Back Item must be returned within:30 Days Return policy details:Part must be returned in original packaging. Part must not have been installed or used and needs to be in the original condition in which you received it. Please coordinate all returns with customer service through eBay messaging prior to sending back any product in order to better process your return. Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Restocking Fee:No Part Brand:CENTRIC Manufacturer Part Number:120.62081 SME:_4061 Placement on Vehicle:Front

Mercedes ‘Baby CLS’ in 2013 – based on new Mercedes B-Class.

Sat, 29 Jan 2011

A 'Mercedes BLS' in 2013? The Mercedes A Class and Mercedes B Class are coming to the end of their life. And with the end of the current generation of the compact Mercedes we will also see the end of the expensive ‘Sandwich’ platform originally designed for the first A Class.

McLaren Special Operations: Bespoke bits for your McLaren

Tue, 30 Aug 2011

McLaren Special Operations - your McLaren, your way We reported last week that McLaren had taken a customised MP4-12C to Pebble Beach and that it heralded the start of ‘McLaren Exclusive’ to customise customer cars. We were close, but its actually McLaren Special Operations -  and not McLaren Exclusive –  that’s doing the customising. But the principle is the same; McLaren will do pretty much anything you want done to your McLaren – as they always have – but with the McLaren Road Car division growing all the time it will all now come under the banner of the new  McLaren Special Operations division.

The Leko – a new car from IKEA? – Not a chance!

Tue, 24 Mar 2009

A new site claims IKEA is about to launch a car - on the 1st April! [ad#ad-1] The latest silly site to go (semi) viral online this week purports to be teasing a new car from IKEA, that hell of  a flat-pack, windowless, clockless shopping experience where the only instructions you get for assembling your insane purchase are a set of pictures on a big sheet of paper, that seemingly have no resemblance to the contents of the package you’ve been stupefied in to buying. Now on the face of it this is perhaps plausible.