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Ignition Starter Switch Standard Us-198 on 2040-parts.com

US $66.74
Location:

Landing, New Jersey, United States

Landing, New Jersey, United States
Condition:New Quantity Sold:sold individually Interchange Part Number:1S6231, LS754, US-198, 1802-310435, LS624, IS29 SKU:SI:US- 198 Terminal Type:Blade Terminals Brand:Standard Terminal Gender:Male; Female Manufacturer Part Number:US-198 Terminal Quantity:9 Connector Quantity:2 Fitment Footnotes:Genuine Intermotor Quality; NPS:W Quantity Needed:1; AAIA Part Type Description:12935 Other Part Number:53-27744, E1407A, 53-27677, 2-IS29, 1S6312, E1414A Engineering Name:Intermotor Ignition Starter Sw UPC:Does not apply

McLaren F1 – You wait ages for one, and then 21 turn up.

Wed, 05 May 2010

A meeting of 21 McLaren F1s. Click for bigger photo The McLaren F1 is arguably the greatest car ever built. Many would disagree – Jeremy Clarkson being one – but many see the F1 as the pinnacle of motoring perfection.

New Porsche Cayenne – the Lumma CLR 550 GT version

Sat, 15 May 2010

The Lumma CLR 550 GT There’s something about the Porsche Cayenne that attracts the tuners and modders to lose the plot. Perhaps it’s the fact the Porsche Cayenne is no oil painting – and frankly, the new Porsche Cayenne is no better – that makes everyone think that whatever they do it can’t look worse. But it can.

Volvo makes breakthrough in battery tech

Thu, 17 Oct 2013

Volvo has developed a new way of ‘storing’ energy for its future electric vehicles. The Swedish firm is exploring the concept of lightweight structural energy storage components made from carbonfibre, containing “nano structured batteries and super capacitors.” This technology is said to offer a lighter, more compact solution to the problem of energy storage, potentially removing the need for the heavy, bulky batteries used in current electric vehicles. On Bing: see pictures of the Volvo S80 Find out how much a used Volvo S80 costs on Auto Trader The investigation into the new technology is part of an EU-funded research project, undertaken by Volvo – the only major car manufacturer involved – and nine other organisations.