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Corvette C4 Headlight Switch 1984 1989 on 2040-parts.com

US $26.99
Location:

Mims, Florida, US

Mims, Florida, US
Returns Accepted:ReturnsNotAccepted Warranty:Yes Part Brand:GM

Corvette 1984-1989 Headlight switch. This is a GM original part not a reproduction. Another great coastal corvette replacement part. We have thousands of new and used corvette parts. We manufacture and sell new and used corvette parts. See our Ebay store for more parts. Call 321-480-0228 for tech questions.

Porsche Panamera Turbo S – Shanghai debut

Tue, 29 Mar 2011

The Porsche Panamera Turbo S - to be revealed at the Shanghai Motor Show Just as we expected, the Porsche Panamera has turned out to be yet another cash cow for Porsche, following on from the very successful Cayenne and proving conclusively that’s it’s the passenger carrying Porsches that sell the best – and make the money. So far with the Panamera we’ve had everything from the £62k V6 Diesel through to the £102k Panamera Turbo, and we know the Panamera Diesel and the Panamera Hybrid are already in the pipeline. But now comes news of another Panamera variant – the Porsche Panamera Turbo S.

Apple's Siri to invade cars within one year

Mon, 11 Jun 2012

The Apple Worldwide Developers Conference 2012 was under way on Monday at the Moscone Center in San Francisco, where Apple CEO Tim Cook has announced that the Siri personal assistant will soon be in the car. According to Cook, within the next 12 months, drivers will be able to hit a button on the steering wheel and connect with that disembodied voice from the commercials. BMW, General Motors, Mercedes-Benz, Jaguar, Audi, Toyota, Chrysler and Honda have all signed on for the experience.

Volvo Group plans wirelessly charged bus line

Tue, 20 May 2014

There's one bit of futuristic transportation technology that seems to get trotted out almost as often as autonomous cars, electric cars and flying cars: Inductive, or wireless, charging for city buses. It's not as sexy or as memorable as the perpetually out-of-reach commuter-grade Harrier jet, but it uses proven technology (GM's EV-1 uses inductive charging, as do electric toothbrushes) to save or eliminate fuel and to reduce emissions. And unlike the flying car, induction-charged buses are hardly fantasy: They've been used in European cities for over a decade, South Korea started testing a fleet last year and Utah got in on the act recently.