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Rear Brake Discs Pair 276mm For Honda Civic 2012-2017 42510-tv0-e01 Genuine Part on 2040-parts.com

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Condition:New Brand:Honda Sub-type:Brake Discs Type:Brake Disc Rotor Fitting Position:Rear Manufacturer Part Number:42510-TV0-E01, 42510TV0E01 Rotor Style:Solid Placement on Vehicle:Rear Reference OE/OEM Number:42510TV0E00, 42510TV0E01, APEC: DSK3005 SDK6753, BLUE PRINT: ADH243123, BORG & BECK: BBD5321, BOSCH: 0986479A92, COMLINE: ADC0571 AND6644, DELPHI: BG4773C, FEBI BILSTEIN: 108479, HELLA: 8DD355118351, JURATEK: HON150, MINTEX: MDC2483, NAPA: PBD8485, QUINTON HAZELL: BDC6123

Citroen to launch '3CV' plus DS3 cabrio, DS4 SUV, DS6

Mon, 24 Oct 2011

Citroen is working on a '3CV', a radical new entry-level model positioned between C1 and C3. Imagine the previous C2 pepped up by the glittery polish that's made the DS3 such a success, and you're not far off Citroen's new city car vision. Known inhouse as Citroen Trois Chevaux (3CV), it reportedly captures the spirit of the quirky Ami 6, draws on the space efficiency of the 2CV and mimics the ride comfort of the hydropneumatically sprung GS.

Ford at CES: Charge your car with science and wash your dishes while you sleep

Thu, 09 Jan 2014

Ford's C-Max Solar Energy Concept is a "plugless plugin," said Donna Bell, which initially sounds silly -- as if the carefully structured chaos and noise of CES may have finally gotten to her. But as someone who has been managing Ford's electric vehicle infrastructure for the past 20 years, she isn't being facetious. Solar panels on the roof of a car aren't anything new -- the Fisker Karma used them to power the radio and other in-car accessories, to cite a soon-obscure example.

UK Car Insurance Company reports buyers downsizing

Sun, 14 Jun 2009

Swinton Insurance claim quote requests for bigger cars are down 20% Swinton say that it has seen an increase of 25% in quote requests for smaller engined cars in the last six months and a decrease of 20% in car insurance quotes for cars over 1.8 litres (which, short of the big-engined cars being scrapped begs the question: What’s happened to the big-engined cars? Did they just disappear, or are they just not being insured?). But this got us thinking.