Left&right Front Lower Control Arm Ball Joint For Honda Civic 2016-2020 1.5/2.0l on 2040-parts.com
Ball Joints for Sale
Front lower control arm for audi a4 s5 quattro a5 s4 b8 q5 8r a6 ball joint 17mm(US $84.99)
Genuine volkswagen id.4 2020-2024 front right side lower wishbone control arm(US $)
1 pair front lower control arm w/ball joints for honda civic 2016-2020 1.5l 2.0l(US $95.50)
For 2007-2012 nissan altima 2.5l 2pcs front lower control arms ball joint lh+rh(US $141.02)
For jaguar f-type rear upper lower right suspension wishbone track control arms(US $)
79-93 mustang prothane rear control arm round bushing kit 8.8 rear axle foxbody(US $124.95)
Golf SV Gains Five-Star Safety Rating
Thu, 26 Jun 2014VOLKSWAGEN’S new Golf SV has received the top safety award of five stars from the independent Euro NCAP organisation. With its top-class package of safety features made up of robust vehicle body structure, highly effective combination of seat belts, seats and airbags, plus innovative driver assistance systems the Golf SV has been judged as one of the world's safest cars. The overall safety rating of five stars for the Golf SV is made up from the results in four categories: occupant protection for adults and children, pedestrian protection and safety assistance.
Who's Where: Richard Ferlazzo appointed GM Australia design director
Fri, 30 Aug 2013Richard Ferlazzo has been appointed General Motors Australia design director. Taking up the position from 1 September, he will report directly to executive director international operations design Michael Simcoe and also GM Holden chairman and managing director Mike Devereux. Ferlazzo will be responsible for Advanced, Production and Global Contract programs and replaces Andrew Smith who left Holden this month to take up the position of executive director of global Cadillac and Buick design at GM's technical center in Warren, Michigan.
BMW US revives ‘The Ultimate Driving Machine’ +video
Sat, 30 Apr 2011BMW 5-Series Refuel Advert - Ultimate Driving Machine As car slogans go, the ‘Ultimate Driving Machine‘ from BMW has probably been one of the most successful slogans in car history. Which made it all the more surprising when they dropped it. Their arguments for changing their marketing direction were sound, but always seemed a bit misguided.












