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Timing Cover Explorer; Mountaineer V8; 5.0l Platinum# 2670008 on 2040-parts.com

US $166.45
Location:

Ronkonkoma, New York, US

Ronkonkoma, New York, US
Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Refund will be given as:Money back or exchange (buyer's choice) Item must be returned within:30 Days Return policy details:Please contact customer service at 888-533-9119 before returning items to receive instructions. No returns will be accepted without prior contact. Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Restocking Fee:10% Manufacturer Part Number:2670008 Interchange Part Number:308-457, F67Z 6019-AA Other Part Number:635-106 Warranty:Yes

The future is cloudy

Tue, 07 Jan 2014

Last night before CES opened here in Las Vegas we met the principals of a start-up company called Driver Cloud. They said they had an idea about using the cloud to operate a package delivery service the same way other sites do ride sharing – you'd send out a notice on their network that you needed a package delivered and a bonded, licensed Driver Cloud truck owner would deliver it for you for a fee. The service, called Gofr, would work in conjunction with Driver Cloud's ride sharing component, called Chofr.

SEMA 2008 show report: Pontiac G8 and Solstice

Fri, 07 Nov 2008

By Ben Whitworth Motor Shows 07 November 2008 10:01 According to Pontiac, its G8 GXP Street, G8 ST and Solstice GXP concepts at the SEMA show ‘raise the performance bar even higher, taking style and sportiness to the highest levels’. Time to don your oxygen masks as we scale the dizzy heights of Pontiac’s performance peaks. While the standard GXP isn’t short of grunt with a 6.2-litre 415bhp V8 under the bonnet, the Street swings with a hefty 7.4-litre punch that’s good for 638bhp and 600lb ft of torque.

Porsche CEO likely to bow to pressure to leave, report says

Wed, 22 Jul 2009

Porsche CEO Wendelin Wiedeking is likely to bow to pressure from the Porsche family to step down, a German newspaper report said on Wednesday. Business daily Handelsblatt said that the two parties had already reached agreement that the chief executive should go and that a formal decision could come by Thursday, when the company's supervisory board meets. The newspaper also said, however, that Wiedeking would fight to keep his job.