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Mlb Los Angeles Dodgers Aluminum Color Auto Emblem, 3d Look, Licensed + Freegift on 2040-parts.com

US $9.95
Location:

Scottsdale, Arizona, US

Scottsdale, Arizona, US
Return policy details: Refund will be given as:Money back or exchange (buyer's choice) Item must be returned within:14 Days Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Restocking Fee:No Manufacturer Part Number:Los Angeles Interchange Part Number:Dodgers Surface Finish:Aluminum Part Brand:MLB

Emblems for Sale

Car April Fool Stuff: From Chips Away to BMW

Tue, 01 Apr 2014

Chips Away’s new APP removes dents in cars The car news on April 1st always includes a chunk of April Fools, and this year is no different with some good, some bad and some quite lame. The people that take the everyday knocks out of your car at home – Chips Away – have come up with a DentsAway App – in conjunction with ALA – that will uses a Smartphone’s electro-magnetic pulses to ionise the metal on a car dent and pull it back in to shape. Chips Away and ALA have used their April 1st announcement as the chance for a giveway, with three winners getting a pair of tickets for the Goodwood Festival of Speed this year if they share the video (below) on Facebook or Twitter.

Aston Martin Cygnet – the intro begins +video

Mon, 04 Jan 2010

There's a promo video for the AM Cygnet featuring the sport of Parkour - Free-Running When we first reported that Aston Martin were buying in the Toyota iQ to turn it in to a ‘Mini-Me’ Aston Martin – the Aston Martin Cygnet – we were pretty sure that AM were for real, even though they did call it a Concept. That feeling was more than affirmed a couple of weeks ago when Aston Martin released a few official pictures of the Cygnet and gave us some production targets – 2000 a year in Europe. But only sold to existing AM customers.

Battery breakthrough set to accelerate electric-car development

Thu, 12 Mar 2009

A team of scientists working at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology are claiming a significant breakthrough in recharging times for lithium-ion batteries. According to findings published in the scientific journal Nature, MIT researchers Byoungwoo Kang and Gerbrand Ceder have unlocked the potential of lithium-ion batteries by patenting a unique process which is claimed to allow a typical laptop power pack to be fully recharged in less than a minute--an improvement in recharging performance of roughly 90 percent over existing lithium-ion batteries. Lithium-ion batteries generate electric current via the flow of lithium ions across an electrolyte, from an electrode to a cathode.