Parking Brake Cable Fits 1998-2002 Kia Sportage Auto 7 on 2040-parts.com
Washington, District Of Columbia, United States
Parking Brake Cables for Sale
Parking brake cable fits 2006-2012 kia sedona auto 7(US $61.33)
Dodge neon srt-4 oem black emergency parking pull handle hand e brake lever(US $39.99)
06 -11 mercedes w164 ml ml350 class parking brake release handle lever oem l(US $29.99)
1967-1969 camaro 69-75 nova oe rear park brake cable(US $44.95)
Triumph spitfire parking brake cable and brackets
2006 range rover sport snf500150 parking brake module(US $349.99)
Concept Car of the Week: Autobianchi Runabout (1969)
Fri, 14 Jun 2013The 850 was a very popular car for Fiat in the ‘60s, especially in its spider version with its cute design and compact proportions. When the time came to replace it, Fiat went back to Bertone, where chief designer Marcello Gandini was charged with designing its replacement. Not happy to simply recreate the 850, he began with a whole new layout by placing the engine directly in front of the rear axle for a mid-engined layout.
New Freelander prices revealed
Wed, 20 Sep 2006By Nathan Millward Motor Industry 20 September 2006 01:55 Land Rover's new Freelander is more powerful, refined, spacious – and pricier. The range will kick off at £20,935, and first deliveries are due in November. The new Freelander range is five-door only, and Land Rover is launching with the most potent engine versions: a 158bhp 2.2-litre diesel and a 229bhp 3.2-litre straight six petrol.
Car sales plunge, Bank of England cuts rates
Thu, 06 Nov 2008New car sales plunge in October: Renault sales were down by more than half By Nigel Wonnacott Motor Industry 06 November 2008 12:30 Following the sixth monthly decline in new car sales this year (down 23% this month), economists have revised market forecasts downwards, while the Bank of England has cut interest rates by 1.5%. October’s 23% drop was the worst so far and trade body SMMT now fears sales could end the year at just 2.15 million cars. That’s 8% lower than the 2.34 million predicted to leave showrooms back in January and would be the worst market performance in more than a decade.
