Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Saab Sonett 95 96 V4 Bosch Oil Pressure Sender Switch New on 2040-parts.com

US $12.99
Location:

Brookfield, Wisconsin, United States

Brookfield, Wisconsin, United States
Condition:New other (see details) Manufacturer Part Number:0344101086 Brand:BOSCH

NEW BOSCH OIL PRESSURE SWITCH  FOR SAAB V4  MODELS

I CAN USUALLY COMBINE SHIPPING WITH MY OTHER ITEMS. PLEASE CONTACT ME TO VERIFY.

  USA SHIPPING IS FREE. INTERNATIONAL SHIPPING IS $11.00



On Mar-15-03 at 07:14:26 PST, seller added the following information:

After purchasing, pay instantly with your credit card through PayPal!

Koenigsegg One:1 (2014) first official pictures

Fri, 28 Feb 2014

By Ollie Kew First Official Pictures 28 February 2014 14:00 Stand well back. This is the Koengisegg One:1, and it may well need a team of lion-tamers to restrain it from leaping clean off its Geneva motor show stand and picking a fight with the McLaren P1, LaFerrari and Porsche 918. You’re looking at, according to Koenigsegg, the new fastest road car in the world.

Land Rover Discovery Vision concept (2014) first teaser of Disco’s future

Thu, 03 Apr 2014

By Ollie Kew First Official Pictures 03 April 2014 00:01 Meet the new Land Rover Discovery. Okay, stop squinting; this is merely a teaser of the ‘Discovery Vision’ concept car that Land Rover will unveil at the New York motor show later in April 2014. Imagine you’re a child sat on the middle seat of the second-row bench in the Discovery Vision concept.

80 mph speed limit: Idaho and Wyoming poised to be next

Thu, 27 Mar 2014

Idaho and Wyoming could soon see 80 mph speed limits introduced to a number of highways, joining Texas and Utah as the states with some of the fastest permitted passenger car-driving speeds, KMVT-TV in Idaho is reporting. A bill in Idaho would see some sections of interstates go from 75 mph to 80 mph, and other selected highways go from 65 mph to 70 mph, which are probably speeds that drivers are doing anyway in remote and not-so-remote parts of both states. But the Idaho Transportation Department did not lend its support to the bill even though it is given the authority to implement it.