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Nissan Titan 04-07 Diamond Mesh Black Powdercoat Truck Grill Insert Add-on Trim on 2040-parts.com

US $129.95
Location:

Riverton, Utah, US

Riverton, Utah, US
Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Refund will be given as:Money Back Item must be returned within:14 Days Return policy details:We gladly accept returns on most of our items, however, ALL returns must be PRE-AUTHORIZED by emailing us first. Once we authorize your return you will be issued an RMA number which must be included with your return to receive credit. Items returned without a valid RMA number will not be refunded or processed, so please do not return your item to us without contacting us first. We appreciate your cooperation! Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Restocking Fee:No Part Brand:Ferreus Industries Manufacturer Part Number:TRK-133-04black

Grilles for Sale

Audi Urban Concept City Car first photos

Sun, 28 Aug 2011

Audi Urban Concept City Car - first photos It’s hard to know exactly what Audi plans to do with their City Car - theĀ AudiĀ Urban Concept – once they’ve rolled it out to the world at Frankfurt 2011. Are they planning to put the diminutive electric Audi go-kart in to production? We really don’t know, but if they are, it’s a while away; we’ve been getting e-Tron concepts for an age with no concrete sign of their arrival, so any production Urban Concept from Audi is not going to happen quickly.

One Lap of the Web: falling rocks, falling prices, and a Ford Frontenac?

Wed, 04 Sep 2013

-- If this isn't the automotive video of the week, then we don't know what is. A car in Taiwan just barely avoids being crushed by a gigantic boulder, whose water and mud bow wave shoves the car a few feet before the boulder even lands anywhere near the car. Watch the top of the hill at the very start of the video.

Monster Jam is totally rad

Thu, 15 May 2014

To our 6-year-old selves, monster trucks really were the biggest, baddest things on four wheels, mechanized, city-block-sized demon machines that ate sedans and belched fire. The reality is that the trucks aren't that big when you get right up next to them -- certainly not the Caterpillar 797-sized car-obliterators we imagined years ago. They're probably around 12 feet high at most; given current trends, they'll be eclipsed by heavy-duty pickups in a design cycle or two.