Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Mercury 95-98 Villager/quest Abs Module/unit/computer 1995 1996 1997 1998 on 2040-parts.com

US $60.00
Location:

Clarion, Pennsylvania, US

Clarion, Pennsylvania, US
Returns Accepted:ReturnsNotAccepted Part Brand:OEM

Description:

Anti-Lock Braking System (ABS) Control Module/Unit/Computer from a 1995 Mercury Villager

FITS:

1995 1996 1997 1998 Mercury Villager
1996 1997 1998 Nissan Quest

591-55015B , F3XA-2C219-AC

95614 , 1-15 , 2088



Condition: Item is used, and subject to normal wear.
See "Description" above, also review the picture, you are bidding on the actual item in the picture.

Payment must be received within seven days of auction end date.

Returns: All USED PARTS are sold AS IS


Powered by eBay Turbo Lister
The free listing tool. List your items fast and easy and manage your active items.

New Land Rover Concept at Frankfurt – Project Icon lives?

Thu, 04 Aug 2011

New Land Rover Defender Concept expected at Frankfurt Last week AE ran a report that suggested Land Rover were considering dumping the iconic Defender from their range as it was perhaps too difficult to find a cost-effective way to update it. Which we didn’t buy for a minute. As far as we can see, the Land Rover Defender is so iconic that Tata would have to find a way to keep it viable and in production even if they lost money on every Defender they built.

Los Angeles Motor Show: Porsche reveals new Panamera flagship

Thu, 21 Nov 2013

THE SCINTILLATING Panamera Turbo S has been launched at twin events at the Tokyo and Los Angeles motor shows. The new flagship at the top of the firm’s grand tourer line-up packs a 562bhp punch from a twin-turbocharged V8 engine mounted at the front, with drive transmitted to all four wheels via a sophisticated drive system that can shift torque to whichever wheels can best use it. Displaying true supercar pace, the Turbo S can catapult to 62mph in just 3.8 seconds on the way to a top speed of 192mph.

The Super Bowl's most refreshingly honest car ad

Fri, 08 Feb 2013

In 2000's High Fidelity, hapless record-store owner Rob Gordon -- played memorably by John Cusack -- opines, “What really matters is what you like, not what you are like." In the year 2000, I was 24 years old and was working on a punk rock magazine, an environment not dissimilar from Gordon's Championship Vinyl. The line made a lot of sense to me; it was a quiet, back-of-the-head maxim that informed much of what my friends and I did and how we saw people. It's a shallow way of looking at things, but for those of us who came of age amid the us-vs.-them liberal identity politics of the '90s, awash as we were in Public Enemy's political consciousness, the post-AIDS gay-rights push and the loud-fast feminism of the riot grrrl movement, there was a good chance that if somebody liked the things you liked, they thought like you and they were good.