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02 03 04 05 Freelander Right Front Seat Belt Retractor Assembly on 2040-parts.com

US $49.99
Location:

Picayune, Mississippi, US

Picayune, Mississippi, 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:75498 Interchange Part Number:210-52979 Year:2002 Model:FREELANDER Stock Number:130144 Mileage:101000 Conditions and Options:4DR,TAN/GRY RT RETRACTOR Genuine OEM:YES Brand:ROVER Part Number:75498

Voxan Wattman is world's most powerful electric motorcycle

Wed, 04 Dec 2013

It would be fair to say that we're a little bit in love with the Voxan Wattman electric motorbike. There's just something wonderfully cutting-edge about the design, and that's before you start peering beneath its chiselled skin. If we were looking for a motorcycle to make an escape silently across the border and into Switzerland, this is surely the bike to do it on.

Volvo ES wagon completes new concept car trio (2014)

Mon, 24 Feb 2014

By Ollie Kew and Damion Smy First Official Pictures 24 February 2014 10:00 This is our first look at the new Volvo estate car concept that’ll be shown at the 2014 Geneva motor show. Called the Volvo ES Concept, it’s the third and final design study from Volvo’s new chief designer Thomas Ingenlath, who’s been pinched from Volvo rival VW to pen a sharp and sexy new range of Swedish metal to take on the dominant Germans. We’ve seen Ingenlath’s idea of a BMW 4-series-sized coupe, and an XC90-previewing SUV.

Battery breakthrough set to accelerate electric-car development

Thu, 12 Mar 2009

A team of scientists working at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology are claiming a significant breakthrough in recharging times for lithium-ion batteries. According to findings published in the scientific journal Nature, MIT researchers Byoungwoo Kang and Gerbrand Ceder have unlocked the potential of lithium-ion batteries by patenting a unique process which is claimed to allow a typical laptop power pack to be fully recharged in less than a minute--an improvement in recharging performance of roughly 90 percent over existing lithium-ion batteries. Lithium-ion batteries generate electric current via the flow of lithium ions across an electrolyte, from an electrode to a cathode.