Monroe 172185 Front Quick Strut Assembly on 2040-parts.com
Temecula, California, US
Shocks & Struts for Sale
- Monroe 181845r front complete strut assembly(US $148.44)
- Monroe 181989 front complete strut assembly(US $116.27)
- Monroe 181780 front complete strut assembly(US $144.43)
- Monroe 181616 rear complete strut assembly(US $122.49)
- Acdelco oe service 540-634 rear shock absorber-shock absorber(US $84.27)
- Monroe 32165 rear monroe matic plus shock(US $28.86)
Mercedes-Benz handing off all V12 development to AMG
Thu, 23 Aug 2012Wholly and verily, the Mercedes-Benz V12 in AMG tune is the most astounding motor Daimler puts in a car. Yes, the last-legs 6.2-liter 6.3 V8 is a hairy, wondrous beast. The diesel V6, with enough torque to shame a Buick 455, makes short business of long-distance travel, and the twin-turbo eights are nothing to sneeze at.
CAR launches new supercar zone
Thu, 31 Jul 2008By Tim Pollard Motoring Issues 31 July 2008 10:26 CAR Online today launches its new supercar zone – a celebration of all things supercar related. We name the greatest and most significant supercars over the past four decades to coincide with the 36-page Supercars 2008 supplement free with the new September 2008 issue of CAR Magazine. Here's a whistle-stop tour of the highlights of our supercars microsite: • We name the landmark supercars• Browse our GBU supercar guide• The forgotten supercars• Vote for your favourites in our polls• Gallardo 560-4 vs Ferrari F430 video• New video library of supercar videos• CAR blogs: how we crashed on the Reventon launch and other supercar tales• Tomorrow's supercars: the scoops• The technical advances – 1966 vs 2008• Test your knowledge in our supercar quizFor all this and more, click here to go to our new supercar zoneClick here for a preview of the Supercars 2008 supplement
Toyota recalls 2003 Sequoia for stability-control problem
Wed, 28 Apr 2010Toyota is recalling thousands of the 2003 Sequoia SUV to repair a potential stability-control problem, the company announced on Wednesday. The recall covers 50,000 of the SUVs produced early in the 2003 model year. The problem is the stability control could activate at too slow of a speed (about 9 mph), limiting the ability of the Sequoia to accelerate.