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00 01 Mazda Mpv Right Front Door Elec on 2040-parts.com

US $425.00
Location:

Mobile, Alabama, US

Mobile, Alabama, 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 shipping will be paid by:Buyer Restocking Fee:No Inventory ID:129349 Part Placement:Passenger/Right Interchange Part Number:120-58836AR Year:2000 Model:MAZDA MPV Stock Number:090318 Conditions and Options:green,van,Lx,FWD A Genuine OEM:YES Brand:MAZDA Part Number:129349

Doors & Door Handles for Sale

Toyota Hydrogen Fuel Cell on sale by 2015 at €100k

Tue, 08 Nov 2011

The 2003 Toyota Fine S Hydrogen FCEV Toyota has done a great job of turning the car buying public on to alternative powertrains with it Hybrid setup in the Prius, and now it plans to go the same route with a hydrogen-powered production Toyota. Despite Toyota’s headline commitment to hybrid cars, it has been beavering away for a long time with fuel cell technology for its cars. The photo at the top is of the 2003 Toyota Fine-S Concept which was developed to test the fledgeling hydrogen fuel cell setup, and Toyota were running fuel cell cars in Japan and California at this time too, although not, as far as we know, the Fine S.

LENNON'S FIRST CAR UNDER THE HAMMER

Thu, 10 Oct 2013

THE FIRST car bought by John Lennon after he passed his driving test is being offered for sale at auction next month. The Ferrari 330 GT 2+2 Coupe was bought by the Beatle in 1965 and is expected to sell for between 120,000 euros (£99,987) and 170,000 euros (£141,000). Lennon's biographer, Philip Norman, described how car dealers descended on the singer's home when the news emerged that he had passed his test and offered him a "gleaming smorgasbord" of luxury cars.

The Leko – a new car from IKEA? – Not a chance!

Tue, 24 Mar 2009

A new site claims IKEA is about to launch a car - on the 1st April! [ad#ad-1] The latest silly site to go (semi) viral online this week purports to be teasing a new car from IKEA, that hell of  a flat-pack, windowless, clockless shopping experience where the only instructions you get for assembling your insane purchase are a set of pictures on a big sheet of paper, that seemingly have no resemblance to the contents of the package you’ve been stupefied in to buying. Now on the face of it this is perhaps plausible.