Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Standard/t-series Ac1t Idle Air Control Motor on 2040-parts.com

US $44.62
Location:

Columbia, Pennsylvania, US

Columbia, Pennsylvania, US
Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Refund will be given as:Money Back Item must be returned within:14 Days Return policy details:moneyback less 25% service fee, exchanges will be made plus freight charges, We do not pay returning items shipping charges, buyers must pay return shipping! Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Restocking Fee:No SME:_2653 Brand:Standard/T-Series Manufacturer Part Number:AC1T

VW Golf R Diesel on the way? VW R Division see Diesel & 4WD as the future

Tue, 22 Nov 2011

VW Golf R Diesel in the pipeline? The VW Golf R is the perfect, grown-up hot hatch. With its more parsimonious 4-pot engine (down from a V6 in the last top-end Golf), great performance and 4WD it’s the connoisseurs hot-hatch.

Aston Martin V12 Zagato (2011) makes its racing debut

Tue, 31 May 2011

Aston Martin only unveiled its V12 Zagato limited edition coupe one week ago, but has already put the racing version into action, at the latest round of the ADAC VLN series at the Nurburgring. It was the first chance the public have had to see the Aston Martin V12 Zagato since it was revealed at the 2011 Villa d'Este Concours. Why choose the Nurburgring for the Aston Martin V12 Zagato's race debut?

The Super Bowl's most refreshingly honest car ad

Fri, 08 Feb 2013

In 2000's High Fidelity, hapless record-store owner Rob Gordon -- played memorably by John Cusack -- opines, “What really matters is what you like, not what you are like." In the year 2000, I was 24 years old and was working on a punk rock magazine, an environment not dissimilar from Gordon's Championship Vinyl. The line made a lot of sense to me; it was a quiet, back-of-the-head maxim that informed much of what my friends and I did and how we saw people. It's a shallow way of looking at things, but for those of us who came of age amid the us-vs.-them liberal identity politics of the '90s, awash as we were in Public Enemy's political consciousness, the post-AIDS gay-rights push and the loud-fast feminism of the riot grrrl movement, there was a good chance that if somebody liked the things you liked, they thought like you and they were good.