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Exhaust Manifold Gasket Victor Ms19425 Fits 00-02 Saturn Sc1 1.9l-l4 on 2040-parts.com

US $16.76
Location:

Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, United States

Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, United States
Condition:New Quantity Sold:sold individually Interchange Part Number:21008411, MS 96117 SKU:VG:MS19425 Item Grade:OEM Standard Brand:Victor Package Quantity:1 Manufacturer Part Number:MS19425 NPS:G Product Description - Short - 20:GASKETS Fitment Footnotes:Multi-layered Steel; Application Summary - 240:Saturn:(1.9L)SOHC 4 Cyl.Eng.(2000-2002) Quantity Needed:1; AAIA Part Type Description:Exhaust Manifold Gasket Exhaust Manifold Gasket Material:Multi-Layered Steel Engineering Name:Exhaust Manifold Set UPC:Does not apply

New Renault Twingo price & specs – costs from £9,495

Mon, 18 Aug 2014

New Renault Twingo price & specs – costs from £9,495 Following its arrival at the Geneva Motor Show in March, the all-new Renault Twingo has now gone on sale in the UK with a choice of two petrol engines and costing from £9,945. First engine choice is a 3-cylinder 0.9 litre Dynamique TCe 90 – which develops 89bhp and 100lb/ft of torque – and comes with 99g/km emissions and official economy of 66mpg. The Twingo Dynamique TCe 90 can get to 62mph in 10.8 seconds.

Classic vs. Modern, Part One: Porsche 911 Carrera 3.2 or 2012 Kia Rio SX

Mon, 01 Oct 2012

A recent 220-volt shock administered by the $23K-plus window sticker of a loaded Ford Fiesta rental car made me think about what the same dollars would buy in a classic car, and what the relative cost of ownership would be. My favorite matchup doesn't even require as much coin as said fully accessorized rental Fiesta. The 2012 Kia Rio SX carries an as-tested-by-Autoweek price of $20,745.

Automakers try to stop increase in ethanol limit to 15 percent of gasoline

Mon, 11 Oct 2010

Automakers are seeking to head off an EPA ruling that would allow gasoline to contain 15 percent ethanol, up from 10 percent now, and they've won some bipartisan congressional support. The two main automaker industry lobbies have argued that the U.S. Department of Energy has done insufficient testing to assure that gasoline containing up to 15 percent ethanol won't harm vehicles.