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Moog K80765 Ball Joint, Lower-suspension Ball Joint on 2040-parts.com

US $40.27
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:K80765 SME:_2195 Position:Lower Location:Front National Popularity Code:W Application Summary - 240:DODGE DURANGO 07-04 Product Description - Long - 80:BALL JOINT

Volvo Concept You – the future Volvo

Tue, 13 Sep 2011

Volvo Concept You - Volvo's future direction We have to confess that we weren’t huge fans of the Volvo Concept Universe at Shanghai this year, but the Frankfurt offering – the Volvo Concept You – is more convincing. The Concept Universe at Shanghai was just a bit too much ‘East meets West’ in design, with the feeling that it was just not quite the right direction for a new, more upmarket Volvo to follow. But the Concept You is more convincing.

GT Academy winner Heitkotter's next step is the 24 Hours of Dubai

Thu, 03 Nov 2011

It all culminates in January at the 24 Hours of Dubai: That's when video-game player and GT Academy winner Bryan Heitkotter will race, professionally, with European GT Academy winner Jann Mardenborough in a Nissan 370Z. The GT Academy was a contest that started last December in which Gran Turismo 5 players competed for a seat in a real race car. Thousands entered, 32 players rose to the top, and 16 of those were invited to a seven-day whirlwind racing and evaluation program at the Silverstone circuit in the United Kingdom.

Call for ban on on vehicle-side advertising

Thu, 08 May 2014

ALL ADVERTISING and promotional banners on commercial vehicles should be banned as they are distracting to other drivers and tempt them to use mobile phones while driving. This is the call from Flexed, a car leasing company, which has carried out a survey that shows a quarter (23%) of drivers admit to trying to type a website address into smartphone after seeing an advert on a lorry. A further 10% of drivers admitted they had tried to take a camera phone photo of an advertisement on a commercial vehicle to use later.