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Volkswagen Oem 1k0909606d Air Bag-side Impact Sens on 2040-parts.com

US $82.33
Location:

Brunswick, Ohio, US

Brunswick, Ohio, US
Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Refund will be given as:Money Back Item must be returned within:30 Days Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Restocking Fee:No Genuine OEM:Yes Part Brand:VOLKSWAGEN OEM Manufacturer Part Number:1K0909606D Item Name:Side Impact Sens Category 1:Electrical Category 2:Restraint Systems Category 3:Air Bag Components Part Ref# on Diagram:ONLY PART REFERENCE #17 ON THE DIAGRAM IS INCLUDED

GM shifts gears, will keep Opel

Tue, 03 Nov 2009

General Motors' board of directors has decided that it will keep the Opel business and restructure it, putting an end to plans to sell the European operations to auto supplier Magna International. GM said it expects the restructuring of Opel to cost $4.42 billion (3 million euros), which it says is lower than the costs associated with outside bids for the company. GM said it will soon present its restructuring plans for Opel to the German government and other governments in Europe.

Lotus Elise Club Racer (2011) at 2011 Geneva motor show

Tue, 22 Feb 2011

The Lotus Elise Club Racer is the latest variation on the long-serving Elise, which will debut at the 2011 Geneva motor show. Disciples of the 'Lotus=lightweight' mantra will be pleased to know the Elise Club Racer does without the German tuner bling, additional luxury features or merchandising that have appeared during CEO Dany Bahar's bold reinvention of the Hethel sports car maker. The Elise Club Racer marks a return to old-school values for Lotus, with some 24kg of extraneous weight removed from the 15-year-old Elise; and added hardware tweaks to ensure the well-regarded roadster retains its performance edge.

July 9: Keeping it topped off

Fri, 09 Jul 2010

As expected, when I walked back to my parking space at VSP parking across the street from Burbank Airport the i-MiEV was fully charged. No problem. It had more than 24 hours to get charged and it can't take more than 16 hours to do it, if you figure one hour per kWh at 120 volts.