Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Jdm Subaru Impreza Gdb Gg2 Gda Hid Head Lights Oem on 2040-parts.com

US $250.00
Location:

dubai, uae, United Arab Emirates

dubai, uae, United Arab Emirates
In very good condition
Brand:SUBARU Placement on Vehicle:Front Manufacturer Part Number:OEM Country/Region of Manufacture:Japan


THIS AUCTION IS FOR SET OF JDM SUBARU IMPREZA GDB GG2 GDA HID HEAD LIGHTS OEM.IT IS IN VERY GOOD USED CONDITION.SOME MINOR SCRATCHES ARE EXPECTED AS IT IS NORMAL FOR USED ITEM.

SET IN THE PICTURE IS THE SET YOU WILL GET

SHIPPING AND HANDLING IS $145 FOR USA AND CANADA

BY EMS  [EXPRESS POSTAL SERVICE]

NORMALLY IT TAKE 3-7 DAYS WITH TRACKING # AND INSURANCE FOR ANY DAMAGE OR LOST, FOR ANY DAMAGE DURING SHIPMENT BUYER HAVE TO FILE CLAIM TO THE POST OFFICE BECAUSE THEY WILL PAY FOR DAMAGE NOT ME

FOR ALL OTHER COUNTRIES PLEASE ASK FOR SHIPPING RATES

 ONLY WAY OF PAYMENT IS PAYPAL

Jaguar F-Type R: Coupe or Roadster?

Sun, 21 Oct 2012

With the new Jaguar F-Type arriving in showrooms in spring 2013, will the follow-on performance F-Type R be a coupe or Roadster? But it’s clear that the new V8 F-Type S isn’t going to be the pinnacle of the F-Type range – far from it. With Jaguar seeking to hang the whole brand identity on their first real roadster since the E-Type, a range-topping variant in the guise of an F-Type R is a certainty.

Gesture-controlled Audi wins VDA Design Award

Wed, 25 Sep 2013

The German Association of the Automotive Industry (VDA) has announced the winner of its 2013 Design Awards, which asked students from across the world to submit their final graduating projects completed between October 2011 and July 2013. Eric Leong from Sweden's Umeå Institute of Design, came in first place with his 'Audi Elite' project, earning himself €4,000. Leong's single-person vehicle can be controlled using the entire body through gestures and movements, and adapts to the needs of the driver, giving them more control.

Toyota reveals safety research car at CES

Mon, 07 Jan 2013

One day before the International Consumer Electronics Show opened its doors in Las Vegas, Toyota took the wraps off the highest-tech Lexus LS ever made. The car -- with spinning sensors and probing lasers galore -- is meant to demonstrate safety features that could be coming to production cars someday soon. Called the Advanced Safety Research Vehicle, it sure looked like some of the autonomous self-driving vehicles we saw at the DARPA Challenge, but Toyota stressed that a robot car is not the goal.