Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Oxygen Sensor-oe Style Bosch 13053 Fits 95-02 Saturn Sl2 1.9l-l4 on 2040-parts.com

US $45.31
Location:

Front Royal, Virginia, United States

Front Royal, Virginia, United States
Condition:New Quantity Sold:sold individually Quantity Needed:1; SKU:BOS:13053 Other Part Number:ES10675, 250-21028, SG418, AP1-28, OS883, ES11078 Brand:Bosch Interchange Part Number:234-1022, 213-1186, 21025117, 21022987, 21039 Manufacturer Part Number:13053 SBL-2 Eyelets Eyelet to Eyelet (Center):Connector, flat contacts Oxygen Sensor Type:Narrow-Band Non-Heated UPC:00028851130530 MFG Name:ROBERT BOSCH LLC Position:Upstream Supplier Company Name:Robert Bosch LLC Fitment Footnotes:Exact Fit;Oe Manufactured Part; Oxygen Sensor Connector Type:OE Connector

Lamborghini Cabrera: The tease begins

Wed, 27 Nov 2013

Lamborghini Cabrera: The tease begins Just yesterday, we reported that the very last Lamborghino Gallardo had rolled off the production line in Sant’Agata Bolognese after a ten year reign. And Lamborghini are wasting no time whetting appetites for the Gallardo, with a new website launched to tease its replacement, complete with a ‘start’ button to hear the new V10 roar and instructions to “Listen to your instinct – Discover the roar of the new creature from Lamborghini”. That replacement is probably going to be called the Lamborghini Cabrera, which we’ve been expecting to debut at the 2014 Geneva Motor Show.

BMW-Toyota partnership may yield hybrid Z4, new Supra

Mon, 24 Mar 2014

The BMW-Toyota sports-car lash-up has been reported on for a couple of years now, but new information from a report in the U.K.'s Autocar sheds more light on the future of the BMW Z4 and what this year's Toyota FT-1 concept will ultimately herald. Like the current Z4, its predecessor and the Z3 before it, as well as every generation of Supra, the new platform will feature a front-mounted gasoline engine. From there, things look to be diverging wildly as technology marches forward.

Study: Distracted driving deemed socially unacceptable among young drivers

Wed, 17 Apr 2013

A new survey shows that young drivers think it’s socially unacceptable to drive distracted. This data is among the results of tiremaker Bridgestone Americas Inc.'s annual survey that polls more than 2,065 drivers aged 16 to 21 nationwide. Of those drivers, 80 percent said sending texts and emails is "unacceptable." But our distracted-driving epidemic isn't solved yet; 37 percent admit to still doing it.