Window Motor/regulator Assy Rear Left 2005-00 Rio Platinum# 1330172 on 2040-parts.com
Ronkonkoma, New York, US
Window Motors & Parts for Sale
- Window motor/regulator assy rear left platinum# 1331908(US $108.62)
- Window motor/regulator assy front left mdx platinum# 1333002(US $134.78)
- Window motor/regulator assy front left camaro, firebird platinum# 1331566(US $105.74)
- Window motor/regulator assy front left 2009-06 impala platinum# 1330771(US $178.55)
- Window regulator, power w/o motor rear right platinum# 1332090(US $112.54)
- Window regulator, manual front left platinum# 1330428(US $112.17)
Celebrity chef Guy Fieri's stolen Lamborghini recovered a year later
Tue, 01 May 2012While it might seem that a thief disappearing into the night with a celebrity's Lamborghini would be something out of a Nicholas Cage movie, it proves that truth sometimes is stranger than fiction. In May 2011, someone broke into the British Motor Car Distributors dealership in San Francisco one night and drove off with a yellow 2008 Lamborghini Gallardo Spyder. The Lambo, owned by celebrity chef and friend of Autoweek Guy Fieri, was seemingly lost forever.
Toyota and Mercedes-Benz are top global car brands
Sun, 23 Oct 2011Toyota & Mercedes-Benz are the Top Global Automotive Brands 2011 Interbrand, a branding consultancy, delivers a report on the world’s brands every year, and in 2011, despite recall woes and the devastation of the Japanese Tsunami, Toyota leads the automotive brands, with luxury car maker Mercedes-Benz just behind. Interbrand uses three measures to gauge how effective a brand is – performance of branded product, the brands ability to secure earnings and the role of the brand in purchasing decisions – to come up with a chart of the top 100 world brands. At the top of the tree are companies like Coca Cola, IBM, Microsoft and Google, but car brands do well with Toyota, Mercedes-Benz, BMW, Honda, VW, and Ford all making it in to the top 50.
700 medics call for car smoking ban
Fri, 07 Feb 2014AROUND 700 medics and health experts are calling on the Government to ban smoking in cars carrying children ahead of a Commons vote on Monday. In a letter to the British Medical Journal (BMJ), respiratory experts said secondhand smoke was a "major cause of ill health in children", damaging the developing lungs, causing sudden infant death and leading to thousands of hospital trips every year. Signatories to the letter are being co-ordinated by Dr Nicholas Hopkinson from Imperial College London and chairman of the British Thoracic Society's chronic obstructive pulmonary disease specialist advisory group.