Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Anti-lock Brake Part W/traction Control Fits 98 Windstar 9503059 on 2040-parts.com

US $140.15
Location:

Eugene, Oregon, United States

Eugene, Oregon, United States
Condition:Used Conditions & Options:3.8,FWD PartNumber:545 Genuine OEM:Yes Mileage:0 Interchange Part Number:545-01382B Model:WINDSTAR Inventory ID:9503059 Year:1998 Designation:Used GTIN:Does not apply Stock #:EFG016

New Ford Fiesta ECOnetic starts production

Mon, 26 Mar 2012

New Ford Fiesta ECOnetic The latest versions of the Ford Fiesta ECOnetic have gone in to production, offering 86mpg and 87g/km CO2. When we reviewed Ford’s first Fiesta ECOnetic we were impressed that, at least if you were prepared to drive wi8th a very light foot, you could get 70mpg out of a comfortable and fun Fiesta. But we did say that ECOnetic should be an engine choice and not a model choice.

New recalls hit 2.7 million GM vehicles, from Corvettes to Saturns

Thu, 15 May 2014

General Motors is recalling 2.7 million U.S. cars and trucks for problems ranging from flawed taillamps and windshield wipers to brake problems, in an escalation of the safety crisis that has enveloped the company for months. GM said today it expects to book up to $200 million in charges in the second quarter to cover the cost of recalls during the period.

MINI celebrates 100 years of car production in Oxford

Fri, 08 Mar 2013

MINI will be celebrating a century of car production in Oxford on 28th March 2013, 100 years since the first Bullnose Morris Oxford was produced. It’s 100 years since the first Bullnose Morris Oxford rolled out on 28th March 1903, since when 11,655,000 cars have been built – with as many as 28,000 people employed in its heyday – and even Tiger Moth planes and Iron Lungs built alongside 80,000 repairs to Spitfires and Hurricanes during WWII. What is now MINI’s Plant Oxford was founded by William Morris – and Morris Motors kept control until 1952 – and has been owned and run by BMC, then British Motor Holdings (when Jaguar arrived), British Leyland (when Leyland Trucks, Triumph and Rover joined), nationalisation in the 1970s saw a variety of names, Rover Group arrived in 1986 and was subsequently privatised and sold in 1994 to BMW.