Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

92-94 95 96 97 98 Chevy Tracker Sidekick Mass Air Flow Sensor 13800-58b00 1.6l on 2040-parts.com

US $55.00
Location:

Abbottstown, Pennsylvania, United States

Abbottstown, Pennsylvania, United States
Condition:Used Years:92 93 94 95 96 97 98 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 Placement on Vehicle:Front Years ext:1997 1998 Brand:Suzuki Country/Region of Manufacture:Japan Type:Mass Airflow Sensor (MAF Sensor) Surface Finish:Plastic Warranty:6 Month Manufacturer Part Number:OEM B577 Other Part Number:16v 16 valve 1.6 MAF Sensor

GOOD USED MAF SENSOR FROM A 1995 CHEVY TRACKER

PART NUMBER 13800-58B00

E5T53071 3Z10

EMAIL IF YOU HAVE ANY QUESTIONS AT ALL

THANKS!

Cyclists urged to make themselves visible

Tue, 22 Oct 2013

CYCLISTS have been warned to take precautions to make themselves easier to see, in time for the darker evenings of winter time. The clocks are set to wind back by an hour this Sunday, bringing darkness down on homeward commutes and making collisions involving cyclists statistically more likely. A survey of 1,000 cyclists, carried out by Autoglass, found that 48% had been caught without lights or high-visibility clothing when the clocks go back.

Cadillac teases Detroit 2013 concept at Pebble Beach

Tue, 21 Aug 2012

Cadillac teased a new concept car at the weekend at Pebble Beach to be unveiled in the steel at an unnamed American auto show early next year. We'll see you on the GM stand in Detroit then. During a press event Cadillac's Global Design Director Clay Dean said it was time for the brand to "reflect back not for nostalgia, but what made us great at the time." There were no further details about what we can expect from the concept but from what we can see from these renders is what appears to be a further move away from the geometry of the Art and Science form language towards a more sculptural surface treatment intersected by sharp, precise creases.

Video: Fiat creates café racer 500 for SEMA

Tue, 30 Oct 2012

Fiat is preparing a café racer-style 500 for this week's SEMA show by stripping down an Abarth version to take it "down to the essence of what you need to drive a car." The café racer philosophy of ‘more speed, less comfort' was born around the 1960s British 'biker scene and while initially focussed on increasing performance, quickly developed into a culture as concered with 'the show' as 'the go'. "It takes something like this to really get noticed at SEMA," says Craig Buoncompago, Project Manager at Fiat Product Design. "The Café Racer is really going to be one special car that you guys should really come and see." The 500's roof has been chopped, while also shorn of its door handles and being fitted with hot rod billet rims.