Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

1986-90's Jaguar Xjs-he-v12 Coupe Front Corner Glass Oem Nice on 2040-parts.com

US $75.00
Location:

Cranston, Rhode Island, US

Cranston, Rhode Island, US
Returns Accepted:ReturnsNotAccepted Part Brand:JAGUAR/TRIPLEX Placement on Vehicle:Array Surface Finish:GLASS/TINTED Warranty:No Country of Manufacture:United Kingdom

 This is one pair of left/right corner front quarter windows for a 1986 Jaguar XJS- HE-V12 coupe, both OEM Jaguar Triplex, tinted , nice shape, stored inside a long time, thanks for looking. FREE SHIPPING LOWER 48 USA, WILL SHIP ANYWHERE IF BUYER PAYS COST, NO RETURNS, ALSO , MUST BE INSURED , ITS GLASS

Audi A3 Sportback e-tron price and specs – costs £34,950

Mon, 28 Jul 2014

Audi A3 Sportback e-tron (pictured) costs £34,950 If governments are going to base car taxation on Co2 emissions, then car makers are going to build cars that ‘game’ the official tests. A perfect example of which is the new Audi A3 Sportback e-tron plug-in hybrid. It’s expensive at £34,950 (although the government bribe for plug-ins does drop the price you pay to £29,950), but thanks to its ‘up to 31 miles’ range on battery power only it comes complete with official economy of 176.6 mpg and emissions of 37g/km.

97% of UK Lexus sold in 2014 will be hybrids

Mon, 09 Dec 2013

Speaking during the European launch of the new Lexus GS300h – the new entry-level hybrid in the executive GS range – Lexus UK director, Richard Balshaw, revealed that 97% of all Lexus sold in the UK next year are likely to be hybrids. The GS300h’s deputy chief engineer, Yukihiro Kito, als confirmed to MSN Cars that the return of diesel-powered Lexus vehicles is unlikely to happen any time soon – if at all. On Bing: see pictures of Lexus hybrids Find out how much a used Lexus costs on Auto Trader According to Kito-san, diesel just does not make sense for Lexus given the markets the company is chiefly competitive in, which is to say the USA and Asia.

'27% would drive into floodwater'

Wed, 27 Nov 2013

A DEVIL-MAY-CARE attitude amongst drivers is commonplace when it comes to flooded roads, according to a survey. Nearly 2% would ignore a road-closed sign, while 42% would blindly follow the vehicle in front if it managed to cross a flooded road successfully, the poll shows. Around a quarter of drivers (27%) would attempt to go through moving floodwater nearly 12in (30cm) deep, according to the Populus survey conducted for the Environment Agency and the AA.