Acdelco 177-0977 Front Disc Brake Rotor on 2040-parts.com
Saddle Brook, New Jersey, US
Discs, Rotors & Hardware for Sale
Acdelco 177-0978 front disc brake rotor(US $121.48)
Acdelco 177-886 front disc brake rotor(US $104.18)
Acdelco 177-0996 rear disc brake rotor(US $78.26)
Acdelco 177-1089 front disc brake rotor(US $95.91)
Acdelco advantage 18a1625a front brake rotor/disc-disc brake rotor(US $67.22)
Acdelco advantage 18a1615a front brake rotor/disc-disc brake rotor(US $50.89)
Production output decline slowing
Fri, 24 Jul 2009By Alex Michaelides Motor Industry 24 July 2009 12:09 It appears there may be some light at the end of the tunnel for ailing car manufacturers as the most recent vehicle production figures are released. The data, presented by the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders (SMMT), show that, while production levels are still on the decline, the pace at which they are declining is slowing. Car production figures for June 2009 are still down by 30.2% compared with this time last year, however this is an improvement on the 50.2% by which production is down so far this year.
BMW i3 Coupe EV in production end of 2013 (video)
Sun, 16 Dec 2012The BMW i3 Coupe Concept will go in to production at the end of 2013, and BMW tell us why the i3 is so important in a new video. We’ve already got the little i3 in the mix and due to arrive in 2013 (although it could come with the more pragmatic option of a range extender instead of as a pure EV) and the i8 supercar is well on its way. But after the reveal of the BMW i3 Coupe Concept at the Los Angeles Auto Show last month, BMW has confirmed the i3 Coupe will go in to production by the end of 2013, and it will be an EV.
General Motors fires back at Volkswagen
Thu, 14 Jul 2011General Motors issued a terse response this week to published comments by Volkswagen CEO Martin Winterkorn, who suggested to the German press that Opel could be sold to a Chinese competitor. Detroit-based GM called Winterkorn's comments “regrettable” and accused him of “fanning speculation.” Opel was nearly sold to Magna and Russian investors in the wake of GM's 2009 bankruptcy. But then-CEO Ed Whitacre and the corporate board reversed that decision, igniting controversy from German political and labor leaders who have long chafed under American oversight.
