Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

New Oem Mazda Miata 2006-2013 Trunk Strut Ne52-56-930 on 2040-parts.com

US $18.00
Location:

Avondale, Arizona, United States

Avondale, Arizona, United States
Condition:New Brand:Mazda Placement on Vehicle:Left, Right Manufacturer Part Number:NE52-56-930 Warranty:No

New OEM Mazda Miata Trunk Strut
This new OEM Mazda trunk strut will fit the following:
Mazda Miata 2006-2013
This is a clearance item!
All sales on clearance are final. Returns will not be accepted. It is what you see is what you get. There is no warranty on these as well. If you are unsure these will fit your Mazda please feel free to send us an email with your vin and we can verify the fitment for you.

Electric wire eases closing of Corvette Stingray hatch

Tue, 12 Feb 2013

A single piece of wire makes closing the hatch on the 2014 Chevrolet Corvette Stingray easier. Tucked behind the rear fascia, the alloy wire changes shape when an electric current heats it up. The wire returns to its previous shape when it cools.

Tesla Model S outselling Chevrolet Volt & Nissan LEAF

Sat, 27 Apr 2013

Tesla never managed to make any money out of their electric Lotus – the Tesla Roadster – but it does look like they’re on to a winner with their electric  executive saloon, the Tesla Model S. Despite moans that the headline-grabbing sub-$50k Model S was never a reality – and a starting point of $70k – the Model S looks set to outsell the two most successful ‘alternatively fuelled’ cars – the electric Nissan LEAF and the range extender Chevrolet Volt – in the first quarter of 2013. Sales of the electric Nissan LEAF, which costs from $29k in the US, in the first quarter of 2013 were 3,965 units and the Chevrolet Volt, which costs from $40k, sold 4,421 units.

Fiat CEO confirms he wants alliance with Opel

Fri, 01 May 2009

Fiat S.p.A.'s boss has confirmed that the automaker wants to form an alliance with General Motors' German subsidiary Opel. "Now we have to concentrate on Opel. They are our perfect partner," CEO Sergio Marchionne told Fiat-owned newspaper La Stampa in a story published Friday.