Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Ecu Ecm Computer Nissan Maxima 1990 1991 Auto Fed 73 A18-a36-e92 9729 364462 on 2040-parts.com

US $59.99
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:364462 Interchange Part Number:590-55057C Year:1991 Model:NISSAN MAXIMA Stock Number:1Z0060 Conditions and Options:ECU,2371098E10,73,A18-A36-E92,9729 Genuine OEM:YES Brand:NISSAN Part Number:364462

Emission Modules/Control Units for Sale

Don't fear Ford's 1.0-liter three-cylinder engine

Wed, 15 Aug 2012

One liter, three cylinders—that's the genetic makeup of Ford's smallest EcoBoost engine yet. And it's coming to the United States. A unit of measurement more suitable for water, olive oil or beer will be powering a Ford on U.S.

Dacia Duster launched

Tue, 08 Dec 2009

Dacia has launched the Duster in to the European market Dacia is Renault’s Romanian brand and produces its own cars mostly based on Renault underpinnings. It currently offers none of its cars in the UK, but that could change with the Duster, although the initial roll-out doesn’t include RHD versions. The budget conscious Dacia Duster is Renault’s budget arm’s take on a budget, compact SUV.

Where did the word 'automobile' come from?

Mon, 06 Jan 2014

On Jan. 3, 1899, the New York Times printed the word "automobile" upon its austere pages. It wasn't the first publication to do so; Scientific American used the phrase "automobile carriage" in a May 14, 1898, review of the Winton Motor Carriage, but the Grey Lady -- a more influential publication -- was the first to debate the term.