Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Yamaha Outboard Wire Harness Assembly Part Number 67h-82590-00-00 on 2040-parts.com

US $325.00
Location:

West Palm Beach, Florida, United States

West Palm Beach, Florida, United States
FROM MOTOR BEING PARTED OUT
Brand:Yamaha Manufacturer Part Number:67H-82590-00-00

THIS IS A GOOD REUSABLE ENGINE HARNESS OFF A 2001 SX150 MOTOR DISASSEMBLED FOR PARTS. THE MOTOR HAD NO ELECTRICAL ISSUES PRIOR TO DISASSEMBLY. ALL CONNECTIONS INTACT AND CLEAN-NO CUTS IN WIRE. FITS DIFFERENT MODELS-REFERENCE PART NUMBER 67H825900000 FOR PROPER APPLICATION.

Powered by eBay Turbo Lister
The free listing tool. List your items fast and easy and manage your active items.

Chrysler sold in £3.76 billion deal

Thu, 17 May 2007

By Ben Whitworth Motor Industry 17 May 2007 09:38 Chrysler has been sold. In one of the biggest private equity deals seen in the automotive industry, Cerberus Capital Management has purchased 80.1% of Chrysler in a £3.76billion deal, leaving DaimlerChrysler with the remaining 19.9% stake in the loss-making company. The move marks the close of arguably the most high-profile transatlantic merger and shuts the door on Canadian car assembly giant Magna and billionaire Kirk Kerkorian, who last month offered £2.27billion for Chrysler.

Dodge to get 40-mpg small car; touts mid-cycle product changes

Mon, 15 Nov 2010

Dodge is 14 months away from having a 40-mpg small car based on a Fiat platform. The tooling for that car was recently handed off to Chrysler Group's engineering department, Dodge CEO Ralph Gilles told journalists in San Francisco on Sunday. That small car is key to Chrysler's recovery strategy and to meeting stricter U.S.

Incredible 'see-through bonnet' technology revealed

Wed, 09 Apr 2014

LAND ROVER has unveiled a barely believable new technology that allows off-road drivers to effectively see through the bonnet all the way to the ground. Cameras mounted on the front grille film the terrain and transmit the visual feed to a head-up display for the driver. The alignment is set up to perfectly match the real angle of view beyond the bonnet, creating seamless visibility right back to the car’s wheels.