Dorman 55144 Fuel Filter-fuel Filter Spring - Carded on 2040-parts.com
Cleburne, Texas, US
Fuel Filters for Sale
- Wix 33937 fuel filter(US $24.58)
- Mann-filter wk 832/1 fuel filter(US $19.42)
- Wd express 092 28007 416 fuel filter-korean fuel filter(US $29.17)
- Wix 33943 fuel filter(US $15.46)
- Wix 33011 fuel filter(US $13.23)
- Acdelco fuel filter gf862(US $49.92)
Peugeot 207 Economique – the 99g car
Mon, 20 Jul 2009The Peugeot 207 Economique - guess what its CO2 is?! As you may well have guessed, this is another car maker rolling out the usual low rolling resistance, lowered suspension, gear-change-light, steel wheels version of their regular runaround to create a car that magically dips below 100g/km CO2. Of course it’s completely disingenuous, because unless you drive like you’re carrying the last live eggs of the Dodo all the time you won’t get the CO2 levels quoted, and nor will you get the headline economy.
Early tickets available to the 2012 Amelia Island Concours d'Elegance
Fri, 28 Oct 2011The 17th-annual Amelia Island Concours d'Elegance is set for March 9-11, 2012, at the Ritz-Carlton Amelia Island Resort in Florida. Tickets to all of the events are on sale now online at www.ameliaconcours.org. Discounted tickets to the main events are $50 per adult and $25 for youths ages 12-18.
UK's emergency Budget 2010: how it affects motorists
Mon, 21 Jun 2010Chancellor George Osborne will make the emergency spending cuts on Tuesday 22 June By Tim Pollard Motoring Issues 21 June 2010 09:51 The new UK Government's emergency Budget tomorrow is likely to announce a raft of spending cuts and tax rises bound to affect motorists. The new Conservative-Liberal coalition government is taking the unusual step of holding an emergency summer Budget to reduce the national deficit, which stood at £156bn in 2009-10. The senior Cabinet members signed off the details of the Budget on Friday, but the details won't be confirmed until Tuesday 22 June 2010.Here's our preview of what to expect if you're a car owner:VAT riseMost pundits agree that the rate of value added tax will rise from today's 17.5%. If raised to 20% – the upper limit expected – it could raise an extra £11 billion a year for Government coffers.