Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Radio/stereo For 98 99 00 01 02 03 Passat ~ on 2040-parts.com

US $89.97
Location:

Portland, Oregon, US

Portland, Oregon, US
Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Refund will be given as:Money Back Item must be returned within:30 Days Return policy details:To return an item, you must contact us through eBay contact seller. Check item descriptions to verify return policy or contact us if you have a question. We strive to have excellent customer service. Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Restocking Fee:No Inventory ID:4352429 Interchange Part Number:638-57384B Year:2002 Model:VW JETTA Stock Number:GCA698 Conditions and Options:AM,FM,CASS Genuine OEM:YES Brand:VOLKSWAGEN Part Number:4352429

Mercedes promotes marketing executive to steer U.S. sales

Thu, 15 Dec 2011

Mercedes-Benz USA will promote marketing chief Stephen Cannon to CEO, effective Jan. 1. Cannon, 50, has been vice president of marketing for Mercedes-Benz USA since June 2007.

Datsun Go boldly goes downmarket

Tue, 16 Jul 2013

The Datsun Go (pictured) has been revealed in India We’ve know since March that Nissan was adding an extra brand name to its portfolio – to add to Nissan and Infiniti – by reaching back in its history to bring the Datsun brand back to life, and we got the first image of what we now know is the Datsun Go at the start of July. Having spent a fortune eradicating Datsun from the minds of buyers and replacing it with Nissan, Nissan are now working to make car buyers in emerging markets fall for the new Datsun Go in the way the UK  did for the first Datsun Sunny in the 1970s. So we get the Datsun Go which is, to all intents and purposes, a Nissan Micra with all the fripperies removed and pitched – initially at least – at the budget end of the car market in India where it will go up against cars like the Hyundai i10 and cost under £5,000 which, entirely coincidentally, is the starting price for the i10.

One Lap of the Web: Automotive remakes, an amphibious Toyota FJ40 and a hyper-realistic CGI Stingray

Mon, 09 Dec 2013

-- Hollywood seems to be utterly out of ideas, which has lead to a slew of remakes and reboots and sequels. Why can't the auto industry get in on the rehashing action? Perhaps hoping to send a signal to carmaker bigwigs Hooniverse asks: what discontinued car could be reintroduced without any styling changes?