Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Right Passenger Side Replacement Power Non Heated Mirror 03-07 Infiniti G35 2dr on 2040-parts.com

US $48.53
Location:

Ontario, California, US

Ontario, California, US
Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Refund will be given as:Money Back Item must be returned within:60 Days Return policy details:Item must be in original packaging, brand new, and never installed. Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Restocking Fee:No Manufacturer Part Number:Partslink Number: NA Interchange Part Number:OEM Number: NA Warranty:Yes

Mirrors for Sale

Cadillac CTS-V priced to undercut M5, XFR

Wed, 21 Jan 2009

By Gareth Evans Motor Industry 21 January 2009 10:17 Cadillac’s new CTS-V supersaloon – claimed to be the be the most powerful Cadillac ever built – will undercut its European competition by several thousand pounds. Prices will start at £56,495, positioning the new Cadillac CTS-V just below the new Jaguar XF-R (£59,900) and comfortably undercutting German rivals such as the BMW M5 (£63,325) and Audi RS6 (a fulsome £74,550). Performance figures for the CTS-V make interesting reading, with 60mph being dispatched in 3.9 seconds and a top speed of 191mph for the manual car (175mph for the automatic).

UK motorway to charge moving electric cars

Tue, 15 Apr 2014

The Highways Agency is set to test wireless charging in moving electric cars on a UK motorway, according to Engineering and Technology Magazine. This would see electric vehicles gain additional charge as they passed over wireless charging nodes embedded in the motorway’s road surface. On Bing: see pictures of wireless electric car charging Find out how much a used electric car costs on Auto Trader The concept, already used by some mobile phones and currently being trialled for static charging of electric cars, uses electromagnetic fields to pass current to batteries without the use of cables or wires.

Philip Hammond is Secretary of State for Transport

Thu, 13 May 2010

Philip Hammond - Secretary of State for Transport The Tories claimed in their election campaigning that motorists have had a raw deal under Labour. Do you know, we’d not noticed. We’d not noticed the inexorable rise in fuel duty even when the country was crying in pain; hadn’t seen the proliferation of speed cameras as revenue gathering tools; not noticed Ken’s cynical manipulation of London’s traffic prior to introducing congestion charging; failed to see that under Labour coppers had disappeared from our roads to be replaced by brainless machines.