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Clutch Flywheel Luk Dmf100 Fits 13-14 Nissan Sentra 1.8l-l4 on 2040-parts.com

US $196.74
Location:

San Bernardino, California, United States

San Bernardino, California, United States
Condition:New Quantity Sold:sold individually SKU:LK:DMF100 Fitment Footnotes:Luk Global# 415 0409 100; Brand:LuK Quantity Needed:1; Manufacturer Part Number:DMF100 Interchange Part Number:DMF2837, 50-2837, PRF50-2837 UPC:Does not apply

Kia sell their 500,000th car in the UK – a cee’d ‘4’ 1.6 CRDi

Sat, 08 Jun 2013

Dale & Amy Pollard receive the keys to Kia’s 500,000th UK car Kia arrived in the UK in 1991 as a seller of budget cars, but in recent years Kia, along with sister company Hyundai, has moved very much in to the mainstream, with a range of credible cars that now sell on merit, not just price. That turn round for Kia has seen sales rising strongly to the point where they have now sold 5000,000 Kias since the marque first arrived in the UK. The milestone car is a cee’d ‘4’ 1.6 CRDi and has been delivered to a married couple in Leicester - Dale and Amy Pollard – who got a bit of special treatment from their Kia dealers - Kia Sandicliffe – at a handover ceremony attended by Stuart Wardle from Kia and Sandicliffe’s John Marsh.

Famous family reminds parents of teen driving responsibility

Mon, 08 Sep 2008

Parents are legally and financially responsible for teens once they get behind the wheel, and no one knows that better than former pro wrestler Hulk Hogan. In 2007, Nick Bollea, the son of Hogan (born Terry Bollea), made news when he was arrested for reckless driving after a near-fatal accident. Nick Bollea was reportedly racing his friend from light to light in a 1998 Toyota Supra owned by him and his father, while his friend Daniel Jacobs was driving Hogan's 2003 Dodge Viper.

Survey reveals in-car climate clashes

Wed, 20 Aug 2014

CLIMATE change isn’t just leading to arguments in politics – it’s causing heat in cars, too, because it seems men and women simply can’t agree on what temperature to set. A new study from Kwik Fit has revealed that 52% of couples whose cars have air conditioning argue over what temperature to set it at, and it’s usually men who want it cooler than their female companions. And as many as 250,000 drivers across the country say their air-con preferences are so different to their partner’s that they simply have to keep the system turned off to avoid bust-ups.