Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Chevy C10 K10 Ck10 73-85 86 87 88 89 90 91 Tail Light L on 2040-parts.com

US $26.99
Location:

San Diego, California, US

San Diego, California, US
Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Refund will be given as:Money Back Item must be returned within:30 Days Return policy details:Items can be refunded, minus any shipping, installation and/or incidental fees, as long as: 1. It is in its original, brand new and resalable condition. 2. It has NOT been installed, altered nor damaged. 3. All of the originally included pieces are returned. 4. They are returned in its original packaging with original invoice/packing slip. 5. 15% restocking fee will be applied. 6. Damaged and lost packages from transit will only be refunded/exchanged if optional shipping insurance is purchased. If this occurs please contact us right away so we can file the necessary claims. 7. If shipping insurance is not offered for a specific shipping method, buyer assumes all risks for losses and damages from shipping. 8. Buyer assumes responsibility for all installation and/or incidental fees. Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Restocking Fee:No Manufacturer Part Number:5965775 Placement on Vehicle:Left Warranty:Yes

BMW releases official X5 M video

Tue, 23 Dec 2008

BMW releases official X5 M video By Ben Pulman Motor Industry 23 December 2008 10:00 BMW clearly thinks the time is right to release an official video of the X5 M testing at the Nurburgring. It’s the car, along with the X6 M, that’s caused BMW to can the M3 CSL – and risk alienating a generation of M division fans. Afraid so.

Vote: Guess this car review, episode 1

Mon, 26 May 2014

This is the beginning of what hopefully becomes a weekly feature here at Autoweek.com. Your job as the reader is to figure out what car we were reviewing when we wrote these lines way back in 2004. This is a closed book test, so there will be no Googling of the answers.

The Great Texas Beer Run

Thu, 17 Feb 2011

For reasons still not clear, boatloads of German immigrants made Texas their home in the 1800s. What they thought they would find similar to their cold, richly forested homeland in the hellaciously hot, mes-quite-scrub, rattlesnake-filled Texas Hill Country is lost to history. Worse, they brought almost nothing with them from the Old World to remind them of home.