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Nissan Qashqai Shock Absorber Front Left Passenger Side J11 Mk2 2015 on 2040-parts.com

US $
Location:

Livingston, United Kingdom

Livingston, United Kingdom
Condition:Used Seller Notes:“PLEASE HAVE A LOOK AT THE PICTURES FOR THE CONDITION OF THE ITEM. ITEM IS USED AND WILL HAVE AGE-RELATED MARKS. ANY DAMAGE WILL BE PICTURED. IF YOU ARE UNSURE OF THE CONDITION OF THE ITEM PLEASE DO NOT HESITATE TO MESSAGE US.” Read Less Brand:Nissan Type:Shock Items Included:Coil Spring Manufacturer Part Number:NOT APPLY Features:Easy to Replace Shock Absorber Type:NOT APPLY Placement on Vehicle:Front, Left Reference OE/OEM Number:NOT APPLY

Audi A1 S line Style Edition adds value to S Line

Wed, 17 Jul 2013

The Audi A1 S line Style Edition (pictured) joins the A1 range Audi, as we know, likes to fill every niche it can with new car product, and it also loves to fill in any gap it perceives in its model trim lineup. So the bean counters at Audi have decided that there’s a hole in the A1 range for a car that’s a bit better equipped than an A1 S Line, but not quite as good as the A1 Black Edition. So say hello to the Audi A1 S line Style Edition.

Porsche 911 buyers flock to rare 24-month leases

Mon, 28 Mar 2011

Porsche is pushing 24-month leases for its 911 and is running a six-month lease pull-ahead incentive on all of its sports cars to offset a shortage of low-mileage used cars. This year, 22 percent of all 911 lessees have taken 24-month contracts rather than 36-month deals, says Michael Bartsch, COO of Porsche Cars North America. That compares with 10 percent before the push.

Jaguar F-TYPE Project 7 dynamic debut at Le Mans Classic this weekend

Thu, 03 Jul 2014

The Jaguar F-Type Project 7 joins the first D-Type at Le Mans this weekend The Jaguar F-Type Project 7 got its reveal at the Goodwood Festival of Speed last weekend as a D-Type inspired, short-run F-Type with 567 bhp and 502lb/ft of torque. It was joined by Land Rover’s first Special Operations car – albeit a prototype version with red and black swirly camouflage – the Range Rover Sport SVR, which gleefully took to the hillclimb to demonstrate the incongruity of a big SUV acting like a hot hatch and sounding like a muscle car on steroids. But what was a little odd is that the RRS SVR happily strutted its stuff, even though it’s only a prototype, but the F-Type Project 7 didn’t turn a wheel in anger.