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Moog K620219 Control Arm/ball Joint Assy on 2040-parts.com

US $302.52
Location:

Chino, California, US

Chino, California, US
Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Refund will be given as:Money Back Item must be returned within:30 Days Return policy details:Part must be returned in original packaging. Part must not have been installed or used and needs to be in the original condition in which you received it. Please coordinate all returns with customer service through eBay messaging prior to sending back any product in order to better process your return. Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Restocking Fee:No Part Brand:MOOG Manufacturer Part Number:K620219 SME:_2464

Control Arms & Parts for Sale

Whos Where: Peter Schreyer to head Kia Design

Mon, 31 Jul 2006

In what's regarded as a major boost for Korean car maker Kia, it has been confirmed that Peter Schreyer will be moving from Volkswagen AG to lead Kia's global design operation. Schreyer will oversee the design activities of the company's regional design centers in Frankfurt, Los Angeles and Tokyo as well as the Namyang Design Center in Korea. While Schreyer's move to Kia comes across as a big surprise for many within automotive design circles, his departure from Volkswagen doesn't.

Mini John Cooper Works WRC: the roll cage in detail

Wed, 06 Jul 2011

Mini claims it’s created the safest WRC car ever – with a little help from Prodrive.  And to prove the point, they’ve opened up the Mini Countryman WRC’s innards and spilled some of the secrets of its rollcage. The Countryman racer is stripped and fitted with a new type of rollcage designed by Prodrive. Its beams curve outwards and the Banbury engineers say it has been designed to withstand impacts much better than the straight crossbeams used in most WRC cars.

Mansory Panamera revealed

Wed, 14 Oct 2009

The Mansory take on the Porsche Panamera But Mansory has a big market in the Middle East and their tastes are less conservative than ours on the whole. Where we’d rather talk quietly but carry a big stick, the Middle East market wants the world to know just how big their stick is from the get-go. Horses for courses.