Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Radio/stereo For 99 00 01 Honda Prelude ~ Am-fm-cd on 2040-parts.com

US $140.45
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:4120370 Interchange Part Number:638-57251B Year:2000 Model:HONDA PRELUDE Stock Number:EBJ491 Conditions and Options:AM/FM/CD Genuine OEM:YES Brand:HONDA Part Number:4120370

New Car Sales Accelerating Ahead

Fri, 06 Dec 2013

IT’S GOOD news in the new car market as the latest figures from industry body the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders (SMMT) reveal registrations already outstripping those of 2012 with one month of the year still to go. A total of 159,581 new cars were registered in November - a 7% rise on the figure for November 2012. Last month's figures took the year-so-far total to 2,111,819 - a 9.9% rise on the January-November 2012 total and already in excess of the year-end 2012 figure of 2.04 million.

CAR interviews Hermann Tilke, the F1 architect (2014)

Wed, 27 Aug 2014

By Tom Clarkson Motor Industry 27 August 2014 09:50 Is this man a genius? You have to hope so because he’s designed half the tracks on this year’s Formula One calendar; and cars, irrespective of their performance, are only as spectacular as the tracks around which they’re racing. Monaco is utterly captivating, Bahrain less so – you get the idea.

'Transport poverty' rising - RAC

Thu, 06 Feb 2014

THE LEAST WELL-OFF families are slipping further into "transport poverty", according to an RAC Foundation survey. The poorest car-owning households spent at least 31% of their disposable incomes on buying and running a vehicle in 2012, the foundation said, up from 27% the year before. The figures, based on data obtained from the Office for National Statistics, showed that in 2012 the poorest families had a maximum weekly expenditure of £167, of which £51.40 went on a car.