Toyota Alphard 2011 Right Head Light Assembled [8010800] on 2040-parts.com
Minato-ku, Tokyo, JP
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- Passenger right side headlight lamp assembly replacement new 1997-2001 honda crv(US $36.14)
- Passenger right side headlight lamp assembly replacement new 1997-2001 honda crv(US $36.14)
- Passenger right side headlight lamp assembly replacement new 1997-2001 honda crv(US $36.14)
- Passenger right side headlight lamp assembly replacement new 1997-2001 honda crv(US $36.14)
- Passenger right side headlight lamp assembly replacement new 1997-2001 honda crv(US $36.14)
- Passenger right side headlight lamp assembly replacement new 1997-2001 honda crv(US $36.14)
Non-starting Nissan LEAFs to be reprogrammed
Sun, 17 Apr 2011NIssan LEAF - date with a laptop They’re not exactly thick on the ground but, as we reported just a week ago, Nissan has already got problems with the Nissan LEAF, which has been refusing to restart once it’s stopped. Not restarting is not exactly a safety issue, so as long as you can actually get your nice new Nissan LEAF to start in the first place there’s no chance it will pack up on you mid-journey (unless you run out of electrickery). But having stumped up at least £10k more than an equivalent ICE car would cost for your LEAF, the least you should be able to expect is it to do what it says on the tin without packing up.
Audi RS7 to lap Hockenheim – DRIVERLESS
Mon, 13 Oct 2014Audi are taking an RS7 round Hockenheim completely autonomously Every car maker – from Mercedes to Volvo and Ford – is working hard to make autonomous driving a reality, and it looks like we’re just a few years away from seeing cars being driven by computers, with the driver relegated to passenger in many daily driving tasks. Now it’s Audi’s turn to demonstrate the progress they’re making with autonomous technology by taking an RS7 round the Grand Prix track at Hockenheim without a driver having control. It’s arguable that taking a driverless car round a track – even at race speed – is far less of a technological task than having a car running driverless through a cityscape with all its variables, but it’s an impressive demonstration nonetheless.
180,000 'lied over motor insurance'
Wed, 17 Sep 2014NEARLY 3,500 cases of motorists lying on their applications for insurance or deliberately leaving relevant information off them are being uncovered by insurers each week, new figures reveal. Some 180,675 attempts to make fraudulent applications for motor insurance as people tried to get cheaper cover than they were entitled to were detected last year, equating to around 3,475 incidents a week, according to data released by the Association of British Insurers (ABI). These claims were exposed as lies by the insurer either at the point when the person applied for a policy, or after they had obtained cover and had gone on to make a claim.