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Mercedes Oem Front License Plate Holder Bracket Cla250 W/o Sport Pack 2014-16 on 2040-parts.com

C $39.99
Location:

Orford, Quebec, Canada

Orford, Quebec, Canada
Condition:New Brand:Mercedes-Benz Country/Region of Manufacture:Germany Primary Color:Black Placement on Vehicle:Front Manufacturer Part Number:1178850381

Mercedes Benz OEM Front License Plate Holder Bracket for CLA Class 250 W/O Sport Package 2014-16. This fit CLA Class 2014-16. This auction is for the CLA 250 front bracket license without the Sport package. Make sure you have the right application before you buy. 

License Plate Frames for Sale

Mercedes-Benz G-class to get V12 power

Mon, 26 Mar 2012

Mercedes-Benz has slyly revealed a lightly facelifted version of the 33-year-old G-class prior to its planned public premiere at the Beijing motor show next month. The reworked version of the German carmaker's iconic military-grade SUV, planned to go on sale in European markets in June with North American deliveries slated to begin by the end of this year, can be seen in the background of an official photograph of the facelifted GLK posted on the Mercedes-Benz media Web site. Among the subtle changes made to the G-class's classic square exterior is a restyled grille with three prominent slats in place of the older model's seven slats, new headlamp inserts with horizontally mounted LED running lights and redesigned mirror housings.

2012 Kia cee’d on sale from £14,395

Mon, 21 May 2012

2012 Kia cee'd arrives in the UK The latest 2012 version of the Kia cee’d goes on sale in the UK on June 1st priced from £14,395 to £23,795. As expected after the 2012 Kia ce’d debuted at the Geneva motor show in March, the new cee’d is going on sale from 1st June. The ‘old’ Kia cee’d moved the bar a lot higher in terms of perception and ability, and made it on screen as the Top Gear car for their SIARPC (the cee apostrophe dee, as Clarkson refers to it).

E85 makes inroads on cost and availability

Wed, 30 Dec 2009

Three years ago, we embarked on a Midwest road trip in search of what was then the Holy Grail of fuel: E85. Our findings weren't too positive--there were far more E85-compatible vehicles on the road in 2006 (5 million) than there were E85 pumps to fuel them (about 700 out of some 200,000 fuel stations nationwide). In addition, those burning the mix of 15 percent gasoline and 85 percent ethanol were paying a pretty penny for their earth-friendly ways, losing about 15 percent in fuel economy while often paying the same price as for regular unleaded.