Power Front Window Regulator With Motor Warranty - Pair on 2040-parts.com
Ontario, California, US
Window Motors & Parts for Sale
- Power front window regulator with motor warranty - pair(US $139.27)
- Power front window regulator with motor warranty - pair(US $117.52)
- Power rear window regulator with motor warranty - pair(US $120.38)
- Power front window regulator with motor warranty - pair(US $117.52)
- Manual front window regulator without vent - pair(US $45.03)
- Power front window regulator with motor warranty - pair(US $127.76)
Tribute to Briton killed in crash
Tue, 15 Oct 2013THE GOVERNING BODY for UK motor sports has paid tribute to a "hugely promising" young British driver killed in a crash. Sean Edwards was a passenger in a Porsche when it reportedly hit the barriers at Queensland Raceway in Willowbank, west of Brisbane, Australia, during a private test session. The driver, a 20-year-old man from Brisbane, was pulled from the burning wreckage and is in intensive care with life-threatening injuries.
Public 'right behind' 20mph urban speed limits
Wed, 02 Apr 2014NEARLY 80% of people think 20mph speed limits should be the norm around schools, in residential streets and in village, town and city centres, according to a survey. More than four in five people think traffic travels too fast on local roads, the poll by road safety charity Brake and Allianz Insurance found. Of the 1,000 people surveyed, 78% backed the 20mph campaign run by Brake, with 72% saying roads in their town or village need to be made safer for walking.
MIT develops self-transforming materials that behave 'like robots without robots'
Wed, 15 Oct 2014A cross-disciplinary research lab at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) has developed a suite of programmable materials, including carbon fiber, printed wood grain, textile composites, rubbers and plastics, that self-transform when exposed to an external stimulus. Director of the Self-Assembly Lab, Skylar Tibbits, presented a TED talk on 4D printing in 2013, where he demonstrated how a flat sheet of material could effectively build itself when exposed to water, like a robot without a robot. Following positive feedback from industries including aviation, automotive and manufacturing, his lab has been working on developing materials that change according to different activation sources, including heat, light, and air pressure, in addition to water – all of which have automotive relevance.