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Nissan 350z Brushed Stainless Steel License Plate Frame, Lifetime Warranty +gift on 2040-parts.com

US $27.95
Location:

Scottsdale, Arizona, US

Scottsdale, Arizona, US
Item must be returned within:14 Days Refund will be given as:Money back or exchange (buyer's choice) Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Return policy details: Restocking Fee:No Brand:Nissan Manufacturer Part Number:350Z Placement on Vehicle:Array Surface Finish:Brushed Warranty:Yes Part Brand:Nissan

License Plate Frames for Sale

Kia announces upcoming concept

Fri, 25 Jan 2013

Kia will unveil an, as yet, unnamed concept car at the Geneva motor show this March. The concept, which the carmaker calls ‘provocative and racy', features a new take on Kia's signature tiger nose aesthetic that integrates the headlamps into the grille design in a narrow, full-width strip. The lamps themselves seem to be contructed of a pixelted, mesh-like light source.

Nissan’s Juke-R vs Supercars irritating video trailers

Tue, 01 May 2012

Nissan's Juke-R vs Supercars Nissan are trailing a video of the Juke-R racing supercars in Dubai with a frustrating string of very short video trailers. Back in January we published an amateur video of the bonkers Nissan Juke-R racing a whole heap of supercars on a street track at the International Arena in Dubai and it was an interesting race, even if the production values were pretty much non-existent. But the real deal on the day was a professional video shoot by Nissan to allow a bit more Juke-R fairy dust to be sprinkled round the Interwebs with a slick and polished race story video, with Gran Turismo gamer Lucus Ordonez pitting the Nissan Juke-R against Salah Salahuddin’s supercar collection - which they’ve finally got round to editing.

Aston Martin Rapide coming home

Tue, 07 Jun 2011

Aston Martin Rapide - homeward bound It took Aston Martin what seemed like forever to get their four-door supercar – the Aston Martin Rapide – in to production, and even then they didn’t build it themselves. When they were busy planning production of the Rapide the world’s economy was buoyant, credit was a piece of cake and Aston Martins were flying out of the showroom. But the new economic reality bit in 2008 and sales fell at Aston Martin, but by then the plan to get the Rapide built at Magna Steyr in Austria was unstoppable so, despite Aston Martin workers twiddling their thumbs as Magna Steyr built Rapides, there as nothing to be done.