Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Column Switch Nissan Altima 2001 54178 on 2040-parts.com

US $62.99
Location:

Waterbury, Connecticut, US

Waterbury, Connecticut, US
Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Refund will be given as:Money Back Item must be returned within:60 Days Return policy details:Please Call us to obtain an RMA for a return, all returns must have an RMA number on them. Buyer is responsible for return shipping charges. Original Shipping is not refunded on items that are purchased wrong, sent back as unwanted, are not needed or did not fix the problem. We only cover you for the exact fit as shown in the description under "verify vehicle information". If it doesn't say the part fits your car then it wont. Please see the item description for more details. Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Restocking Fee:No Inventory ID:54178 Interchange Part Number:629-59575B Year:2001 Model:NISSAN ALTIMA Stock Number:2D0122 Conditions and Options:4D,SD,GXE,ASSY,TESTED Genuine OEM:YES Brand:NISSAN Part Number:54178

Autoweek in review: This week's wrap-up

Fri, 28 Oct 2011

--MotoGP's Marco Simoncelli died on Sunday in a crash on the second lap of the Malaysian Motorcycle Grand Prix, when his helmet came off and he was hit by other riders. Officials canceled the race. -- The Mazda Takeri concept will replace the Mazda 6 sedan within the next couple of years.

Toyota Winglet concept (2008): first pictures

Mon, 04 Aug 2008

By Tom Richards First Official Pictures 04 August 2008 14:33 Toyota has just unveiled the ‘Winglet’, one of its ‘people-assisting Partner Robots’.  It isn’t exactly a car per se, but it has wheels, a motor, and it is a valid alternative to walking. It even has its own ‘trim’ levels – ‘S’, ‘M’ and ‘L’ (from left to right in our pictures). These range from ‘practical’ (with the long handle) to ‘hands-free sporty’.

Tesla pays off its government loans

Thu, 23 May 2013

Tesla paid off the last of its $465 million government loans May 22, nine years ahead of schedule, thus outperforming most U.S. college graduates and the vast majority of American homeowners. Tesla used funds from a stock offering to finish the loan with a whopping bank transfer of $451.8 million Wednesday, pointing out that it was “…the only American car company to have fully repaid the government.” Apparently no one at Tesla was even born when Lee Iacocca paid off Chrysler's $1.2-billion government bailout ahead of schedule back in 1983.