Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Polaris Xlt Speedometer Drive Cable 95 on 2040-parts.com

US $20.00
Location:

Saint Charles, Illinois, United States

Saint Charles, Illinois, United States
Condition:Used UPC:Does Not Apply

Polaris XLT speedometer drive cable 95

Up for sale is a SPEEDOMETER DRIVE CABLE in good working condition. This item is from a 1995 Polaris XLT. This unit was tested and found to be in good running condition


You may be interested in our other eBay listings.


We sell used parts, all parts will show signs of use. Please study the picture carefully to make sure you know what your buying. If there's a problem with your purchase please contact us before leaving negative feedback. If we made a mistake, please give us the opportunity to make it right! Please note the flat rate shipping cost you see is for the continental US only. It will cost more to ship to Puerto Rico, Hawaii, and Alaska

You may be interested in our other eBay listings.

RM Auctions buys Auburn complex from Kruse

Thu, 01 Jul 2010

RM Auctions has bought the Kruse International Auction Park in Auburn, Ind., from financially troubled auctioneer Dean Kruse and plans to hold the site's annual Labor Day weekend car auction Sept. 2-6. Rob Myers, RM Auction CEO, said his company will spend the next several weeks making upgrades to the auction facility and lining up consignments.

Seat unveils electric Altea, Leon plug-in hybrid (2011)

Mon, 14 Nov 2011

Seat has unveiled a pair of prototype electric cars to underline its commitment to EVs: the Altea XL Electric Ecomotive full electric car and the Leon TwinDrive Ecomotive plug-in hybrid. Martorell has also confirmed plans to build hybrids in 2015 and electric cars from 2016. They'll be designed, developed and manufactured in Spain, as the VW group devolves green car centres of excellence away from Germany.

One Lap of the Web: Let's get dynamic

Wed, 28 May 2014

-- How do New Yorkers get by with cars? One way is to drive around in a Baja Bug. Another way is to dive into the strange subculture that is alternate-side street parking, as The Awl explains, which features its own robust cast of well-meaning street urchin characters.