Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Ignition Starter Switch Standard Us-54 on 2040-parts.com

US $29.30
Location:

Asbury, New Jersey, United States

Asbury, New Jersey, United States
Condition:New Quantity Sold:sold individually Terminal Gender:Male SKU:STD:US54 Terminal Quantity:7 Brand:Standard Connector Quantity:1 Manufacturer Part Number:US-54 NPS:W Engineering Name:Standard Ignition Starter Swit Quantity Needed:1; Product Description - Short - 20:Ign Starter Switch Interchange Part Number:D1415B, LS435, US-54, 1S6144, D1426A, 53-27591 AAIA Part Type Description:12935 Terminal Type:Blade Terminals UPC:Does not apply

Asda starts new fuel price war

Mon, 13 Jan 2014

DRIVERS are set to keep some extra money in their pockets with the announcement that Asda is to cut its fuel prices. From tomorrow the firm’s forecourts will knock 2p per litre off both its unleaded and its diesel. If past trends continue, rival supermarkets Tesco, Morrisons and Sainsbury’s are expected to follow suit and reduce their own fuel prices.

Toyota FT-86 II: Now Toyota mean it. Really

Fri, 04 Mar 2011

Toyota FT-86 II at Geneva Toyota has been threatening to produce an affordable sports car for quite a while. And when we first saw the Toyota FT-86 Concept at the end of 2009 (and in the flesh at Goodwood last summer) we’d expected to see it launch this year. Despite that expectation, we discovered in January that Toyota were actually taking a different concept to Geneva – the Toyota FT-86 II – dashing any hopes of the FT-86 in any shape or form hitting the road this year.

British drivers shun autonomous cars in new survey

Mon, 28 Jul 2014

Google autonomous car: most British adults remain sceptical By Tim Pollard Motor Industry 28 July 2014 14:14 A quarter of British adults fear autonomous cars will be unsafe - and 56% would never buy a driverless car, it was claimed today. The survey by Churchill Car Insurance reveals that entrenched attitudes in Great Britain put the new generation of autonomous cars at a disadvantage before they’ve even turned a wheel on British roads. Google is leading the charge towards autonomous driving, but most major car manufacturers are also dabbling in driverless cars.