Standard Motor Products Fls1 Coolant Level Sensor on 2040-parts.com
North Hollywood, California, US
Sensors for Sale
- Oem 00-05 mitsubishi eclipse idle md628318 control valve iac isc 60 day warranty(US $29.99)
- 99 00 01 02 03 mazda mpv miata ps63-02 hitachi boost map sensor(US $39.99)
- Smp/standard th122 throttle position sensor-throttle position sensor (tps)(US $39.62)
- Smp/standard as88t map sensor(US $53.05)
- Smp/standard th127 throttle position sensor-throttle position sensor (tps)(US $35.23)
- Cardone 86-50026 mass air flow sensor-new cardone select mass air flow sensor(US $229.64)
Toyota Prius V and Toyota Prius C concepts (2011)
Tue, 11 Jan 2011What’s the plural of Prius? We don’t know, but at the 2011 Detroit motor show today Toyota pulled the wraps off two new Prius models. One is a production-ready MPV called the Toyota Prius V, and the second is the Prius C concept, which will inspire a future small hybrid.
Volvo reveals safety kit on 2015 XC90 SUV
Tue, 22 Jul 2014By John Mahoney Motor Industry 22 July 2014 10:34 Volvo claims the all-new XC90 that will be revealed in late August will be one of the safest cars money can buy thanks to pioneering new safety technology. So far the Swedish carmaker has teased us with designer sketches of how the seven-seat crossover will look, told us how it will be offered with a 395bhp plug-in hybrid that emits just 60g/km of CO2 and released official pictures of the production XC90’s interior. Now it’s time for the Volvo publicity machine to tell us about the novel new safety tech that will protect us from ourselves and this includes two claimed world firsts.
Support For Fuel Duty Pothole Plan
Fri, 12 Sep 2014MORE than four in five people would support a plan in which money raised from fuel duty was used to repair potholed roads, research has found. Support is highest in eastern England, Wales and Yorkshire and Humberside, according to a survey by the Local Government Association (LGA). The LGA said the Treasury got £33 billion a year from fuel duty, while the Government was spending just under £2 billion a year on maintaining and improving roads over the next five years.