Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

New Gm Oem Rear Bumper-object Sensor Left Gm# 22844403 on 2040-parts.com

US $199.00
Location:

Sandy, Oregon, United States

Sandy, Oregon, United States
Condition:New Genuine OEM:Yes Placement on Vehicle:Left Quantity Sold:sold individually Category 1:Body Hardware Brand:GM Category 2:Rear Bumper Manufacturer Part Number:22844403 Category 3:Bumper & Components Item Name:Object Sensor Other Part Number:90799568, 23122739

NEW GM PART IN THE ORIGINAL BOX. FREE SHIPPING TO THE U.S. 48 STATES ONLY

Air Bag Parts for Sale

Porsche 960 supercar confusion

Mon, 07 May 2012

Porsche 960 - will sit below the Porsche 918 Spyder The Porsche 960 is a mid-engined Porsche supercar heading for production in 2015 and aimed at the Ferrari 458.  Now firmly in the bosom of the VW Group, Porsche is forging ahead with its plan to dominate every expensive ‘Sporty’ niche on the planet – a bit like Audi, but at a higher level. One of the new models we know about – or are almost certain we know – is on the way is a Ferrari 458 and McLaren MP4-12C competing Porsche 960. The venerable Georg Kacher talked about the Porsche 960 in Car Magazine last year and his utterings made much sense.

Details of UK's £5000 Plug-In Car Grants published

Tue, 14 Dec 2010

The Government has signed off the Plug-In Car Grants, giving details of which electric cars qualify for the £5000 grants. The incentive means that cars such as the Vauxhall Ampera will cost £28,995, GM confirmed today. Transport secretary Philip Hammond and business minister Mark Prisk announced the scheme and confirmed which areas will qualify for the second round of Plugged-In Places funding - allowing councils to install electric car recharging networks.

Learners can vet driving instructors

Mon, 17 Mar 2014

A NEW SYSTEM of grading driving instructors will help learner drivers choose the best possible tutor. The new system awards driving instructors a simple A or B grade or a fail should their ability not meet the required standard. All qualified driving instructors have their standards of teaching checked at least once every four years to ensure they deliver the right training to new drivers.