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97-03 04 05 06 07 08 Ford E150 L. Electric Door Switch Driver's Windows Master on 2040-parts.com

US $25.00
Location:

Urbana, Illinois, US

Urbana, Illinois, 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 Inventory ID:512098 Part Placement:Driver/Left Interchange Part Number:641-00562L Year:1997 Model:FORD E150 Stock Number:D30066 Mileage:108447 Conditions and Options:LH Brand:FORD TRUCK Part Number:512098

Fire risk Porsche in global recall

Mon, 24 Feb 2014

SPORTS car maker Porsche is asking more than 100 UK owners of the latest 911 GT3 models to stop driving them while tests go on following cases of vehicles catching fire. The advice, to 101 UK owners who have paid around £100,000 for their vehicles, has gone out to a total of 785 owners worldwide of the GT3s from the 2014 model year. Porsche said there had been two cases in Europe of cars catching fire.

Porsche approves the Cajun, a junior 4x4

Mon, 29 Nov 2010

Porsche's supervisory board today confirmed it would build the Cajun, a junior SUV to slot beneath the Cayenne in its range. The announcement from Stuttgart confirmed the 'working name' Cajun and said the new model would increase growth. Critics will surely say that the Cajun represents yet another move away from Porsche's sports car roots, but don't forget the effect that Cayenne sales have had on the company's balance sheets.

Toyota FT-EV II – it’s the Jetsons!

Tue, 06 Oct 2009

The Toyota FT-EV II Electric city car concept As we reported earlier, Toyota believe electric cars have no future, apart from as short-range, low power city runarounds or as commercial vehicles. So the Toyota FT-EV II is exactly what Toyota believes the EV future is – a small, slow city car. Toyota say of the FT-EV – “… (its) design and technology look to a future society where EVs will be in common use, among a range of different means of transport that will reflect user requirements, the type of energy used and the local energy supply infrastructure”.