Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Porsche Porsche Cayenne Air Flow Meter 4.5l, W/o Turbo 04 05 06 on 2040-parts.com

US $125.00
Location:

Seattle, Washington, United States

Seattle, Washington, United States
Condition:Used Tag Number:0000015827 Model:PORSCHE CAYENNE Stock Number:00015243 Condition and Options:4.5L, w/o turbo Year:2004 Mileage:1000 Brand:PORSCHE

PORSCHE PORSCHE CAYENNE [AIR_FLOW_METER] 4.5L, w/o turbo 04 05 06


Donor Vehicle:



Model: PORSCHE CAYENNE
Year: 2004
Odometer: 1000 Miles
StockNumber: 00015243

Part Details:



Comments: 0281002435 MAF Mass Meter Air Flow Sensor


Interchange Information:



4.5L, w/o turbo

also fits the following models:PORSCHE CAYENNE 2004 - 2006 4.5L, w/o turbo
PORSCHE CAYENNE 2003 - 2003 w/o turbo

Tour de France improve cycle safety

Tue, 01 Jul 2014

THE TOUR DE FRANCE, which starts in Yorkshire for the 2014 race, has helped increase cycle safety awareness by 90%. Cyclists report car drivers are being more patient and giving them more space on the road in the build-up to the biggest cycling race in the world. A survey by ColinAppleyard.com found 90% of drivers say they are more of cyclist because of Le Tour, while 73% of drivers said they are now more careful around cyclists.The arrival of the Tour de France has also made 10% of drivers consider buying a bike.

RAC to carry universal spare wheel

Thu, 16 Jan 2014

The RAC believes call outs to cars with punctures but no spare wheel will reach 250,000 a year by 2015, so has decided to roll out its own universal spare wheel as a hassle-reducing solution. The universal spare wheel, which has already been successfully trialled, should become standard equipment for all RAC breakdown patrols by early February 2014. On Bing: see pictures of universal spare wheels Spare wheel solution from the RAC The RAC has taken this step as increasingly few modern cars are sold with a factory-fitted spare wheel as standard.

Report Claims Pothole Repair Blackhole Is £12bn

Thu, 03 Apr 2014

FIGURES from the Asphalt Industry Alliance (AIA) have revealed the extent of the nation’s pothole crisis, with a report claiming the "catch-up" cost of getting roads back into reasonable a condition has soared to £12 billion. The total is an increase on the £10.5 billion figure reported last year, and remains high despite more than two million potholes being filled in England and Wales over the last 12 months. This was despite a 20% decrease in the shortfall in annual road maintenance budgets reported by local authorities, with the shortfall reducing from an average of £6.2 million to £5.1 million per authority in England.