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Standard Motor Products Hls-1098 Headlight Switch on 2040-parts.com

US $55.95
Location:

Bensenville, Illinois, US

Bensenville, Illinois, US
Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Refund will be given as:Money back or exchange (buyer's choice) Item must be returned within:14 Days Return policy details:Items can be returned within 14 days of receipt of item. Payment will be refunded without shipping charges. Must contact seller via email prior to returning.Unwanted items must be returned in original packaging and condition. Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Restocking Fee:No Brand:Standard Motor Products Manufacturer Part Number:HLS-1098

Autoweek in review: What you might have missed

Fri, 02 Dec 2011

Rally driver Ken Block spent his summer on a three-continent tour of car trickery, and his highlight video can be viewed here. The Chevrolet Volt has been in the spotlight this week because of a NHTSA investigation into battery-pack fires, but the car still topped an owner-satisfaction survey. Tokyo Motor Show press days were this week, and you can check out our complete coverage here.

No! Sleep! Till L.A.!: Mercedes-Benz to reveal CLC with Beastie Boys' Mike D

Thu, 15 Mar 2012

Want to be among the first to see Mercedes-Benz's Concept Style Coupe? Then you gotta fight! For your right!

Early cars, fashion on display at the Petersen

Thu, 16 Sep 2010

Automotivated, a new exhibit at the Petersen Automotive Museum in Los Angeles, traces the evolution of clothes worn in cars--from the bulky circus-tent stuff people had to wear to keep from freezing to death in the jangly, open-topped conveyances of 100 years ago, up to the height of the European Concours in the 1920s and '30s, when what you and your date wore was just as important to winning best of show as the styling of your Delahaye/Delage/Talbot Lago. “In the earliest days of the automobile, you were sitting on the car, you weren't sitting in it,” said Leslie Kendall, curator at the Petersen. So the first section of the exhibit shows people (mannequins dressed as people) in heavy, practical overcoats, scarves and goggles.