New Eurospare Ball Joint, Jlm11860 on 2040-parts.com
Los Angeles, California, United States
Ball Joints for Sale
- New replacement ball joint, rp10252(US $36.54)
- New replacement ball joint, rp10251(US $52.70)
- New replacement ball joint, rp10203(US $33.44)
- New replacement ball joint, rp10412(US $42.53)
- New replacement ball joint, rp10385(US $41.36)
- New replacement ball joint, rp10253(US $40.39)
Tesla Model S owners will receive upgraded charge adapters
Mon, 13 Jan 2014After a garage fire in Irvine, Calif., in November of last year in which an overheated charging system for a Tesla Model S sedan was stated to possibly have been involved, Tesla will be sending out upgraded wall-charger adapters to all Tesla Model S owners. This upgrade comes on the heels of an over-the-air software update for the charging system in the Model S sedan. Software version 5.8.4 would enable the charging system to automatically reduce the charging current by 25 percent if the system detects unexpected fluctuations in the input power, essentially slowing the charging current and reducing the heat created in any high-resistance connections if the car senses that the current is unsteady.
Free MOTs for life for Audi owners
Mon, 09 Jun 2014Audi In what can only be a bid to boost the use of official Audiservice centres, the German premium car brand is offering free MOTs for life on any age of Audi if the current owner pays to have the cam belt changed. Audi free MOTs for life: what’s the saving and what’s the catch? The complimentary MOT offer effectively represents an annual saving of £49.99 (the current cost of an MOT), as long as you have the cam belt work carried out by an Audi Centre or Authorised Audi Repairer.
Ford takes a swipe at GM’s Facebook spoiler
Sat, 19 May 2012Ford up their Facebook spend as GM depart paid for Facebook After GM said it was pulling its adverts from Facebook this week, Ford has stepped in to say it will spend more. Who’s right? The timing of the announcement by GM this week that it was pulling advertising from Facebook was doubtless designed to inflict as much damage as possible on the Facebook IPO.