Spectra Premium Industries Inc 1010028 New Evaporator on 2040-parts.com
Temecula, California, US
Condensers & Evaporators for Sale
- Spectra premium industries inc 7-3248 condenser(US $114.98)
- Spectra premium industries inc 7-3078 condenser(US $132.07)
- Spectra premium industries inc 7-3119 condenser(US $138.97)
- Spectra premium industries inc 7-3347 condenser(US $118.32)
- Spectra premium industries inc 1010149 new evaporator(US $94.61)
- Spectra premium industries inc 7-3085 condenser(US $122.16)
Hyundai increasing European production to 500,000 a year
Fri, 12 Jul 2013Hyundai are upping production in Europe to 500,000 per annum There’s an awful lot of sense in car makers designing and building cars for the markets they serve locally, and it’s a route Hyundai has followed in Europe, where the majority of their sales are of European built models, not imports. With Hyundai sales still growing despite the European car market meltdown, Hyundai are increasing capacity in Europe to keep up with demand with further investment in their plant in Ízmit, Turkey. Originally, the Ízmit plant produced just 60,000 cars a year, but in 2007 that was increased to 125,000 and now it is being increased to 200,000 so the new i10 can be built there as well as the latest i20.
Jaguar XJ75 Platinum Concept (2010) first pictures
Mon, 16 Aug 2010By Tim Pollard First Official Pictures 16 August 2010 09:28 Jaguar showed off a bespoke XJ at this weekend's Pebble Beach concours d'elegance. The XJ75 Platinum Concept is the latest in a string of 75th anniversary show cars and is designed to demonstrate 'the design customisation potential' of the latest XJ - hinting at further derivatives to follow.What, you mean a new Jaguar XJR?Well, that's one interpretation. The XJ75 Platinum is based on the 464bhp 5.0-litre V8 XJL Supercharged (a US market trim with fewer horses than the full-fat UK 503bhp edition Supercharged) but adds lower front, rear and side trim panels and 22in wheels.
Supreme Court decides police need warrant for GPS trackers
Tue, 24 Jan 2012The U.S. Department of Justice just got taken down a peg by the Supreme Court in a victory for privacy advocates. The high court ruled on Monday that a law-enforcement officer affixing a GPS tracker to a person's vehicle without a warrant is in violation of the Fourth Amendment.