Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Acdelco Professional 337-1018 Starter-starter Motor on 2040-parts.com

US $120.77
Location:

Phoenix, Arizona, US

Phoenix, Arizona, US
Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Refund will be given as:Money Back Item must be returned within:30 Days Return policy details:Items that cannot be returned are: Electrical Parts and Components (Such as: ECU's, Push Button Units, relays, air mass meters, etc). C.O.D. shipments will not be accepted. Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Restocking Fee:No Part Brand:ACDELCO PROFESSIONAL Manufacturer Part Number:337-1018 SME:_3252

Is the DfT trying to nobble 80mph speed limit trials?

Wed, 31 Oct 2012

With trialsĀ proposedĀ for an 80mph speed limit, the ABD are asking if the DfT are trying to fix the trials by running them on congested motorways. When the ConDems came to power, and Philip Hammond was made Transport Secretary, we did hope that might be a sign that government policy on cars would finally make sense, especially when Philip Hammond declared ‘The war on motorists is over‘. Philip’s aim was to look at stuff like national speed limits and create a system that made sense, rather than the silly situation we have where everyone knows you won’t get nicked for 85mph on a motorway unless plod got out of bed the wrong side.

Buick to scrap trim levels

Thu, 06 May 2010

Buick will eliminate its “CX,” “CXL” and “CXS” trim levels in the 2012 model year, opting for a few “stair-step” packages instead, one of the brand's top marketers said today. “It isn't befitting a premium brand. No other premium brand has those designations,” said Craig Bierley, Buick-GMC director of advertising and sales promotion.

General Motors design landmark gets second life--as a school

Tue, 14 Jul 2009

"The profession was invented in this room,” says Richard Rogers, president of the College for Creative Studies (CCS), as he stands in the dusty construction site that used to be the General Motors Argonaut Building. “And this is where Harley Earl's office was.” Looking across the top floor of the building, it is easy to see a circle of concrete like the landing mark of a flying saucer. The circle is the remnant of an early platform for clay models, developed here for the first time as design tools for mass-production autos.