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Engine Oil Filter Cover Dorman 917-016cd on 2040-parts.com

US $33.35
Location:

Asbury, New Jersey, United States

Asbury, New Jersey, United States
Condition:New Quantity Sold:sold individually Material:Aluminum SKU:DOR:917-016CD Color/Finish:Aluminum Brand:Dorman Life Cycle Status Code:2 Manufacturer Part Number:917-016CD Life Cycle Status Description:Available to Order Emission Code:1 Quantity Needed:1; National Popularity Code:C Feature - Benefit 3:Torque values listed on parts (where applicable) Remanufactured Part:N Attachment Method:Oil Filter Wrench Country of Origin (Primary):CN UPC:Does not apply

Government CO2 cock-up

Sun, 03 Jun 2007

By Richard Yarrow Motoring Issues 03 June 2007 02:32 Britain’s new eco-motoring scheme postponed Plans to help Britain’s drivers choose the greenest car for their budget have been thrown into chaos, CAR Online can reveal. The launch of a new Government website for motorists – called www.actonco2.co.uk – has been cancelled just 16 hours before it was to go live. Amazingly, the Department for Transport (DfT) has admitted the eleventh hour delay was because it realised the CO2 data to published wasn’t accurate.

GM's Lutz to retire May 1

Wed, 03 Mar 2010

General Motors Vice Chairman Bob Lutz plans to retire from the automaker effective May 1, according to a statement released by GM on Wednesday. Lutz, 78, had been serving as a senior adviser to GM Chairman and CEO Ed Whitacre after shelving retirement plans to take charge of the automaker's marketing after it emerged from bankruptcy in July 2009. An outspoken executive who both challenged global warming and championed GM's all-electric Volt, Lutz is credited with revitalizing GM's product development efforts after being hired by former GM CEO Rick Wagoner in 2001.

UK Car Insurance Company reports buyers downsizing

Sun, 14 Jun 2009

Swinton Insurance claim quote requests for bigger cars are down 20% Swinton say that it has seen an increase of 25% in quote requests for smaller engined cars in the last six months and a decrease of 20% in car insurance quotes for cars over 1.8 litres (which, short of the big-engined cars being scrapped begs the question: What’s happened to the big-engined cars? Did they just disappear, or are they just not being insured?). But this got us thinking.