Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Kyb 565096 Front Monomax Hp Mono-tube Gs on 2040-parts.com

US $85.47
Location:

Temecula, California, US

Temecula, California, US
Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Refund will be given as:Money Back Item must be returned within:30 Days Return policy details:No returns after 60 days. All parts must be in their original package and condition. ePlatinumAutoParts will not return and refund Parts damaged due to improper installation or abuse. we are not responsible for any expenses caused by defective parts during installation. Catalog data is supplied by the manufacturer, and ePlatinum Auto Parts makes no guarantee as to the accuracy of the parts lookup process. It is the installer's responsibility to verify parts prior to installation. All return orders will be charged a 20% Restocking Fee.Return item must be packed properly Buyer will get refund excluded the Shipping Fee. Buyer have to bare all the return postage Ebay user ID & Ebay item number must be provided in the return package Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Restocking Fee:20% SME:_3940 Brand:KYB Manufacturer Part Number:565096

Electric Rolls Royce Phantom dropped

Sun, 12 Jun 2011

Electric Rolls Royce - not being built   Everyone’s at it – building electric cars, that is – and Rolls Royce are no different. They even put together an electric Rolls Royce Phantom for the Geneva Motor Show earlier this year. And in many ways you can almost see the logic in an electric Rolls Royce.

Retracing Steve McQueen's Los Angeles in his Jaguar XKSS

Mon, 21 Apr 2014

In 1958, Steve McQueen bought this Jaguar XKSS from a local TV personality who kept it parked in a studio lot on Sunset Boulevard. McQueen cajoled his wife Nellie into writing a check for $5,000 -- today around $40,000 -- and became the third owner of XKSS chassis No. 713, a car that had originally been imported a year earlier by Jaguar North America.

Toyota's Lentz to say electronics not to blame for acceleration problems

Tue, 23 Feb 2010

Toyota Motor Sales U.S.A. President James Lentz plans to stick to his guns and tell skeptical lawmakers Tuesday that the company's unwanted acceleration problems do not stem from electronic defects, a copy of his testimony shows. Lentz's reiteration of Toyota's longstanding position suggests that top company executives were unmoved by sharp criticism of that stance Monday by House Energy and Commerce Committee Chairman Henry Waxman.