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Door Handle New Chrome Front Outer Right Hand Suburban Full Size Pickup Chevy on 2040-parts.com

US $20.21
Location:

CA, VA, IL, KY, US

CA, VA, IL, KY, US
Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Refund will be given as:Money back or exchange (buyer's choice) Item must be returned within:30 Days Return policy details:We will send you a replacement part or refund you the purchase price if you received a defective part, a part that was damaged in transit, a part is missing, or you received the wrong part. Please be prepared to send back the part you did receive. We will pay for the return shipping cost by emailing you a pre-paid shipping label with instructions for returning the part. Return shipping will be paid by:Seller Restocking Fee:No Warranty:Yes

Doors & Door Handles for Sale

Autoweek's Vinsetta Garage premieres Jan. 3 on Velocity Network

Thu, 15 Dec 2011

The garage I'd frequent during my high school years, the one at which I sought insight, entertainment, camaraderie and escape, remains warm in my heart with memories. We have these places, you and I, where the people and things that mattered to us—my 1965 Ford Mustang notchback 289 and my buddy's 1963 Jaguar XKE—came to life. In Detroit, that mystical location was Vinsetta Garage.

Kia goes (dark) green

Tue, 23 Sep 2008

By Jesse Crosse Motor Industry 23 September 2008 11:00 Kia has unveiled a portfolio of new environmental technologies, including a 1.4-litre Ceed with stop-start (due in the UK in 2009), a Ceed hybrid and the latest version of its fuel cell-powered Sportage. The Korean manufacturer is investing heavily in research and development and will increase its spend on R&D from £2.2 billion this year to £2.6 billion by 2010, combined with a 40 percent increase in manpower at its research centres around the globe. The money is being spent on developing downsized, turbocharged engines, efficiency improvements to conventional engines such as friction reduction and the separation of accessories like water pumps from the engine.

Survey reveals in-car climate clashes

Wed, 20 Aug 2014

CLIMATE change isn’t just leading to arguments in politics – it’s causing heat in cars, too, because it seems men and women simply can’t agree on what temperature to set. A new study from Kwik Fit has revealed that 52% of couples whose cars have air conditioning argue over what temperature to set it at, and it’s usually men who want it cooler than their female companions. And as many as 250,000 drivers across the country say their air-con preferences are so different to their partner’s that they simply have to keep the system turned off to avoid bust-ups.