Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Mopar Oem 5064037aa Headphones-headphone on 2040-parts.com

US $56.43
Location:

Kernersville, North Carolina, US

Kernersville, North Carolina, US
Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Refund will be given as:Money Back Item must be returned within:14 Days Return policy details:Item must be in original packaging. No returns on Radio's, CD's, DVD's, Navigation Discs or GPS units. Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Restocking Fee:No Genuine OEM:Yes Part Brand:MOPAR OEM Manufacturer Part Number:5064037AA Item Name:Headphone Category 1:Electrical Category 2:Electrical Category 3:Entertainment System Components Part Ref# on Diagram:ONLY PART REFERENCE #4 ON THE DIAGRAM IS INCLUDED

Future products: Lamborghini sees the light

Wed, 22 Sep 2010

Has engine performance gone as far as it can? With horsepower per liter having long since broken the 100-1 mark, Lamborghini seems to think so. So do many European regulators who want to strangle carbon dioxide emissions.

New Chevrolet Camaro will cost from £35,320 in UK

Mon, 10 Jun 2013

The facelifted Chevrolet Camaro will arrive in the UK in November 2013 The current Chevrolet Camaro only hit the UK around a year ago, but with a facelift for the Camaro debuting at the New York Auto Show this year the new Camaro is on its way to the UK, with prices starting from £35,320. The changes to the 2014 Camaro amount to a new nose with wider grill and slimmer lights, a set of vents on the bonnet with a new boot lid, diffuser and lights at the back that somehow contrive to make the Camaro look like a Japanese import. Under the bonnet is the same American Muscle engine – a 6.2 litre V8 – with 426bhp if you opt for the manual gearbox and 400bhp if you go for the auto option, with standard equipment including Keyless, MyLink (which gives you a 7″ touchscreen, rear view camera and voice recognition), SatNav and colour heads-up display.

Electric-car guru Tom Gage steps down from AC Propulsion

Wed, 05 Oct 2011

Electric-car innovator Tom Gage resigned the morning of Oct. 5 from California company AC Propulsion, Autoweek has learned. Gage, the now-former CEO, joined the company in 1996, several years after its founding, and has become its public face and a widely used resource on electric cars.