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Nissan 04-12 Titan Tail Lights Rear Brake Lamp Altezza Black on 2040-parts.com

US $52.95
Location:

Walnut, California, US

Walnut, California, US
Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Refund will be given as:Money back or exchange (buyer's choice) Item must be returned within:30 Days Return policy details:-Our Returns Department reserves the right to reject a returned/exchanged item after the 90 day period. -If you have a return, please contact the customer service team for your RMA form. -No refunds after 30 days. Exchanges Only. -When submitting a Return/Exchange: The item needs to be in brand new condition, never been installed, and kept in its original packaging. Otherwise, you will be charged a 20% restocking fee. Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Restocking Fee:No Manufacturer Part Number:JUNYAN Placement on Vehicle:Array Surface Finish:Black Housing Clear Lens Warranty:Yes

Formula One in USA: New Jersey to host F1 Grand Prix from 2013

Wed, 26 Oct 2011

New Jersey to host F1 Grand Prix of America from 2013 America has always played a marginal part in the F1 Circus. Yes, there have been lots of Grands Prix in the US, but the American public have never embraced F1 fully. But the news that New Jersey will host an F1 Grand Prix for ten years from 2013 could change all that.

GM closes UK Advanced Design Studio

Tue, 09 Aug 2011

CDN has learnt that General Motors is closing its UK Advanced Design Studio as part of its ongoing restructuring program. Clay Dean, GM's executive director of advanced global design and Cadillac's brand director, arrived at the studio on 4 August to announce the closure to staff. The UK studio, which opened in 1999, was predominantly involved in the creation of Cadillac concept cars and was originally planned to be a short-term confidential operation as the smallest of GM's design studios.

Hydrogen powered London Taxis hit the road

Sun, 06 Nov 2011

Hydrogen powered London Taxi revealed last Summer Over two years ago London Mayor, Boris Johnson, promised we would have a ‘Hydrogen Highway’ in London in time for the 2012 Olympics, with a small fleet of 150 cars, 20 black cabs and 5 buses all running on Hydrogen. He also said that London would have half a dozen hydrogen refuelling stations and, in typically ‘Boris’ style, proclaimed that Britain would become a ‘World Leader in Fuel Cell Technology’ and that one in three cars would be powered by hydrogen by 2020. And although we took Boris’s proclamations with a pinch of salt, we were pleased to see a senior politician seeing the future as something other than plug-in BEVs.