Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Geo Tracker Sidekick Heat Control Knob on 2040-parts.com

US $5.00
Location:

Saginaw, Michigan, US

Saginaw, Michigan, US
:

THIS LISTING IS FOR A HEATER CONTROL BUTTON FOR TRACKERS AND SIDEKICKS. SHIPPING IS $2. TO ANY WHERE IN THE U.S.

2014 China Design Schools League Report

Fri, 25 Apr 2014

As well as recognizing the best student automotive design talent, Car Design Awards China also acknowledges the school whose students have had the most success in the competition. For the first time in the competition's five-year history, an award for Most Successful School was given, with the China Central Academy of Fine Art taking the inaugural win. The new category recognizes the institution that has entered the most prize winners and finalists into this year's competition, celebrating its excellence at nurturing the talent that is the life blood of the automotive industry.

Audi at CES 2011

Sat, 08 Jan 2011

Audi will position itself as the leader in in-car electronics, is working on augmented reality head up and 3D cockpits displays, and has already integrated NVIDIA's very latest Tegra 2 super processor to power the HMI of the next A3. Those were just a few of the highlights from a keynote speech given by Rupert Stadler, Chairman of Audi, on the opening morning of the 2011 Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas. Stadler drove onto the stage in the E-tron Spyder concept last seen at the Paris auto show — here painted a fetching shade of deep red — together with CES founder and CEO of the Consumer Electronics Association, Gary Shapiro.

Audi R8 China Edition: 80 cars – numbered 1-99

Mon, 10 Dec 2012

Audi has produced a limited run R8 China Edition with a total of 80 cars being produced in Blue and Grey numbered 1-99. Not only has Audi produced the China Edition R8, they’ve gone to some trouble to make it as appealing as possible to Chinese buyers by numbering the cars 1-99, but excluding any number ’4′. The number 4 is thought unlucky in China as it sounds like ‘si’, which means death.