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Qty (2) Land Rover, Range Rover Lr3 2005 To 2009 Hood Lift Supports, Struts. on 2040-parts.com

US $49.90
Location:

San Marcos, California, US

San Marcos, California, US
Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Refund will be given as:Money Back Item must be returned within:30 Days Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Restocking Fee:No Brand:Lift Supports Depot Manufacturer Part Number:PM1064 Interchange Part Number:8506IB,SG387004,BKK780010,5H2216E610AA,32030482 Other Part Number:C16-15124,C1615124,6358 Placement on Vehicle:Array Warranty:Yes

Tailgates & Liftgates for Sale

Air-powered car edges closer to reality

Fri, 12 Sep 2014

FANCY a car that runs on thin air? We all would, and Peugeot is almost ready to turn it from science-fiction to science-fact. The firm is ready to actually demonstrate its Hybrid Air technology, where a 208 supermini runs partly on petrol and partly on compressed air, resulting in astonishing fuel economy figures topping 140mpg.

Jaguar F-Type Coupe heading for ‘The Special One’ first after UK debut

Fri, 14 Feb 2014

José Mourinho and the new Jaguar F-Type Coupe The new Jaguar F-Type Coupe seems to have been around for ages already, but last night was actually its official UK launch, despite being revealed at the Los Angeles Auto Show three months ago. Jaguar roped in a number of its ‘Ambassadors’ for the event at East Winter Garden in Canary Wharf including its newest recruit, Chelsea manager José Mourinho, who is due to get the first customer F-Type Coupe in the UK next month. Jaguar took the opportunity to use its latest advert ‘Rendezvous’ featuring Sir Ben Kingsley, Tom Hiddleston and Mark Strong as a trio of villainous Brits that first aired in the US during the recent Super Bowl, to kick proceedings off and add life to the #GoodToBeBad campaign.

'27% would drive into floodwater'

Wed, 27 Nov 2013

A DEVIL-MAY-CARE attitude amongst drivers is commonplace when it comes to flooded roads, according to a survey. Nearly 2% would ignore a road-closed sign, while 42% would blindly follow the vehicle in front if it managed to cross a flooded road successfully, the poll shows. Around a quarter of drivers (27%) would attempt to go through moving floodwater nearly 12in (30cm) deep, according to the Populus survey conducted for the Environment Agency and the AA.