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Nissan Oem 49717zb000 Steering Return Hose/power Steering Reservoir Line Hose on 2040-parts.com

US $23.35
Location:

Clearwater, Florida, US

Clearwater, Florida, 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:Parts must not have been installed otherwise returns are not accepted. Special orders may vary. Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Restocking Fee:15% Genuine OEM:Yes Part Brand:NISSAN OEM Manufacturer Part Number:49717ZB000 SME:_3273 Part Ref# on Diagram:ONLY PART REFERENCE #8 ON THE DIAGRAM IS INCLUDED

Cadillac Converj concept

Sun, 11 Jan 2009

Cadillac surprised the press today when it revealed a new 2+2 concept called the Converj. In his introduction to the concept, GM Vice-Chairman Bob Lutz said the vehicle was "pushing the envelope on design quality, and efficiency - everything that makes a great design great". Conceived at GM's Advanced Design studios in Coventry, UK, by a design team led by Simon Cox (Director of GM Advanced Design UK), the project was brought to realization in the US under the leadership of Dave Rand, Executive Director of GM Advanced Design.

New Jaguar XFR-S burns up the Goodwood hillclimb (video)

Sat, 23 Mar 2013

The new Jaguar XFR-S – the most powerful XF to date – has just launched and we have video of the XFR-S on the Goodwood Hillclimb. With an even more aggressive look than the XFR, the XFR-S gets 542bhp and 502lb/ft of torque, enough to move Jaguar’s appealing super saloon to 62mph in just 4.4 seconds. Until now all we’ve had are the XFR-S photos Jaguar delivered (together with a dynamic video too), but with this week seeing Goodwood starting the push for this year’s Festival of Speed with a press day, we have the XFR-S out playing on the hillclimb, and Shmee 150 managed to capture Jaguar’s new cat playing.

Electric cars produce MORE CO2 than petrol or diesel cars

Tue, 26 Mar 2013

Rather than offering a low CO2 alternative to the internal combustion engine, it seems electric cars start their life with an extra 40,000 miles worth of CO2 already on the clock. Despite bribes from governments around the world to get car buyers to buy in to electric cars, they’ve been a flop. But that’s not surprising.