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Moog K200152 Control Arm Bushing Kit-suspension Control Arm Bushing on 2040-parts.com

US $13.01
Location:

Decatur, Texas, US

Decatur, Texas, US
Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Refund will be given as:Money Back Item must be returned within:30 Days Return policy details:All returns need to be in new salable condition and cannot previously be installed. Any Felpro gaskets have to be unopened as stated on Felpro packaging. All Haynes Manuals have to be in the orginal packaging and not opened to recieve credit. No returns on any electrical products. Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Restocking Fee:No Part Brand:MOOG Manufacturer Part Number:K200152 SME:_2460

2012 Porsche 911 undisguised (almost) on Video

Mon, 08 Aug 2011

2012 Porsche 911 undisguised - bar the lights It’s quite hard to find anything new to report about the 2012 Porsche 911 – at least on how it looks – when Porsche themselves release ‘spy’ video of the new 911. But this 911 video shows more. A sharp-eyed – and well-prepared – Porsche fan spotted the brown (Topaz Brown Metallic by the look – trendy colour) 911 at a petrol station in Suttgart and managed to grab some half-decent footage.

MG Concept 5 (2011) first official pictures

Tue, 19 Apr 2011

This is the MG Concept 5, a Focus-sized five-door hatchback designed in the UK and making its debut at the 2011 Shanghai motor show. MG 5…so it’s smaller than the new MG 6, I take it? Yes.

News watch July 2012: today's auto industry news

Wed, 25 Jul 2012

Welcome to CAR Magazine's news aggregator as we round up the daily stories in the auto industry. Top tip: news summaries are added from the top hour-by-hour Tuesday 31 July 2012•Porsche SE recorded a first half profit of €1.15bn, in comparison with €149m for the same period in 2011. The enormous jump has come not from directly selling cars, but from the group's investments in Porsche Zwischenholding GmbH and Volkswagen AG (Porsche SE)•Reuters suggests Germany's car market is in recession, but few outside the industry would know it, thanks to a controversial sales practice that inflates official statistics and paints a flattering picture of demand.