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Porsche 911 912 930 (1965-1989) Fender Washer (5.5 X 28 X 1.5 Fiber) (10) German on 2040-parts.com

US $12.85
Location:

Condition:New: A brand-new, unused, unopened, undamaged item in its original packaging (where packaging is applicable). Packaging should be the same as what is found in a retail store, unless the item was packaged by the manufacturer in non-retail packaging, such as an unprinted box or plastic bag. See the seller's listing for full details. See all condition definitions Material:Fiber Number of Pieces:10 Type:Fender Washer 5.5 X 28 X 1.5 Manufacturer Part Number:999 704 157 40 Other Part Number:99970415740 Brand:GERMAN Fitment Type:Direct Replacement Manufacturer Warranty:1 Year

Fenders for Sale

Nissan sets prices for the 2012 Armada and Titan

Thu, 01 Sep 2011

Nissan is keeping prices essentially the same for the 2012 Armada and Titan lineups, the former with slightly higher stickers for the SL and Platinum models. The Nissan Armada SUV still comes in three trims for 2012. The rear-wheel-drive SV starts at $39,465 with shipping and at $45,065 for the all-wheel-drive version.

2014 Mercedes S Class LIVE reveal

Wed, 15 May 2013

The new S Class (W222) gets a bit longer than the current S Class (by 20mm), a bit wider (28mm) and a bit lower (25mm) but the wheelbase of the standard S Class stays the same at 3035mm with the long wheelbase S Class getting an extra 130mm for extra sprawling room. There will be a variety of engines on offer in the new S Class (from parsimonious 4-cylinders to mighty V12s) but we’re expecting at launch that just three will be on offer – the S350 diesel with a 255bhp V6, the S400 with a 300bhp V6 petrol and the S500 with a 4.7 litre turbo petrol with 450bhp. In terms of styling, Mercedes appear to have taken away much of the bulbous look of the current S Class and replaced it with a more flowing shape, but one that’s still very much S Class.

Traxxas remote-controlled car hits 100 mph: Video

Fri, 02 Dec 2011

Remote-controlled cars have a come a long way since the double-A-battery-powered, open-wheeled, plastic-chassis cars of the past. So far along, in fact, that today's high-quality cars don't do 50 mph, 60 mph or 70 mph. The new Traxxas XO-1 does a neck-snapping 100 mph.