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Atp B-87 Transmission Filter-auto Trans Filter Kit on 2040-parts.com

US $18.47
Location:

Chino, California, US

Chino, California, US
Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Refund will be given as:Money Back Item must be returned within:30 Days Return policy details:Part must be returned in original packaging. Part must not have been installed or used and needs to be in the original condition in which you received it. Please coordinate all returns with customer service through eBay messaging prior to sending back any product in order to better process your return. Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Restocking Fee:No Part Brand:ATP Manufacturer Part Number:B-87 SME:_2617 UPC:00740993000686 Vent Filter Length A:5-3/16" STD. PKG:1 Sales Class:U Each Weight (Gross Pounds):0.32 Product Description - Long - 80:AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION FILTER KIT

Chevrolet Volt uses parts made from oil-collecting booms

Tue, 21 Dec 2010

General Motors is transforming about 100 miles of boom material used to soak up oil in the Gulf of Mexico into auto parts for the Chevrolet Volt. The oil-soaked plastic material collected off the Alabama and Louisiana coasts will keep more than 100,000 pounds of waste from the nation's landfills. The project is expected to make enough plastic to supply the first-year production of Volts with plastic parts for under the hood.

Gemballa Mistrale Porsche Panamera revealed

Fri, 14 Aug 2009

Gemballa has released information on the Porsche Panamera Gemballa Mistrale But there might be an answer to that quandary – turn your attention to the Porsche Panamera. Gemballa has just released preliminary details on the Gemballa Mistrale, a Porsche Panamera conversion which throws a bit of Gemballa madness at Stuttgart’s latest offering. Details are still a bit limited – and we don’t have any info yet on what Gemballa has done with the oily bits – but we do have the picture you see here, which shows the cosmetic stuff.

ESP could save 380 lives a year

Tue, 19 Jun 2007

By Ben Shacham Motor Industry 19 June 2007 12:24 The campaign to make electronic stability control (ESC) standard on all new cars by 2012 is gathering momentum - and it could save 380 lives a year, say ministers. The UK's Department for Transport today claimed that hundreds of lives could be saved every year if all new cars had stability control fitted - totalling 4000 lives across Europe. A campaign to raise awareness of the potential benefits of ESC was launched last month in Rome by European commissioners and FIA president Max Mosley.