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New Blower Motor Black Nissan 200sx Frontier 99 98 95 Sentra 97 1999 Ni3126104 on 2040-parts.com

US $41.18
Location:

La Salle, Illinois, US

La Salle, Illinois, US
Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Refund will be given as:Money back or exchange (buyer's choice) Item must be returned within:60 Days Return policy details:We will send you a replacement part or refund you the purchase price if you received a defective part, a part that was damaged in transit, a part is missing, or you received the wrong part. Please be prepared to send back the part you did receive. We will pay for the return shipping cost by emailing you a pre-paid shipping label with instructions for returning the part. Return shipping will be paid by:Seller Restocking Fee:No Warranty:Yes Part Brand:Replacement Manufacturer Part Number:272207J201 Interchange Part Number:27220-4B000,615-58355 615-58382,NI3126104 Warranty Terms:1 Year Part Number:9612558

Blower Motors for Sale

Mitsubishi goes electric

Wed, 24 Oct 2007

By Ben Oliver First Official Pictures 24 October 2007 12:58 What on earth is that? The iMIEV Sport, a teardrop coupe based on the same running gear as the regular iMIEV (more of which shortly), but with two in-wheel electric motors at the front to complement the single electric motor under the boot driving the rear wheels. The firm says the set-up can mimic the four-wheel drive grip of the S-AWC system used in the Evo X, but there are no plans to put it into production.

Lotus NOT for sale as Proton sold to DRB-Hicom

Mon, 16 Jan 2012

Lotus NOT for sale - at least not for two years Despite rumours that Lotus was for sale, the sale of Lotus parent Proton to DRB-Hicom appears to preclude any sale of Lotus for two years. We reported recently that Lotus owners Proton had been advised to sell its loss-making Hethel car-maker Lotus as it geared up to be divested of State ownership in Malaysia. But it seems the sale of Proton in to private hands is to have the opposite effect.

Missed Shift? American Top Gear struggles to find its own identity

Tue, 30 Nov 2010

"What happened to Top Gear?" my favorite bartender asked this past weekend. "Somebody took the BBC's scripts and wrote Tanner, Rutledge and Adam over cues which previously said Jeremy, Richard and James," I replied. It's an easy sideswipe I admit, but for me--and I'm guessing for the automotive enthusiasts who constitute AutoWeek's audience--it largely tells the tale.