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Performance Tool Flare Nut Wrenches-3-pc Sae Set #w3501 on 2040-parts.com

US $7.99
Location:

Fort Mill, South Carolina, US

Fort Mill, South Carolina, US
Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Refund will be given as:Money Back Item must be returned within:30 Days Return policy details:This item can be returned within 30 days if it is unused/undamaged. All returns must be authorized by customer service and a return authorization must be obtained to return or refund any items. Refunds are for the cost of product only. After 30 days, the item is subject to warranty and must be authorized by a customer service representative. To obtain a Return Authorization, please contact us through eBay messages. Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Restocking Fee:No

CAR Online: the v2.2 redesign (2010)

Wed, 21 Apr 2010

The new look CAR Online By Tim Pollard Motoring Issues 21 April 2010 09:36 You've probably noticed that we've released a modest update to CAR Online. Yesterday's release has gone relatively smoothly, but we're still ironing out a few glitches and bugs. Please bear with us while we do!

Kia at the London motor show 2008

Wed, 23 Jul 2008

Kia Soul Burner: it's a lightly modded version of Kia's new junior Qashqai coming in later 2008 By Gavin Green Motor Shows 23 July 2008 01:32 Expansionist Kia shows no sign of slowing down its forays into the European car market – and the London show provides more evidence of what's to come from the Koreans. What’s new on Kia's London motor show stand?  Nothing. But the Kia people are proffering photos of the new production Soul, set to make its show debut at Paris in autumn 2008.

Learner driver sits test 110 times

Tue, 13 Aug 2013

A 28-year-old woman has sat her driving theory test 110 times, costing the unnamed candidate a whopping £3,410 in test fees. It’s unknown whether the candidate actually passed her driving theory test at the 110th attempt. Reported by the Daily Mirror, the figures released under a Freedom of Information Act request to the Driver and Vehicle Licencing Agency (DVLA) stand as a new record for failing the first section of the UK’s two-part driving test.