Smp/standard Mf1243 Mass Air Flow Sensor-mass Air Flow (maf) Sensor - Remfd on 2040-parts.com
Los Angeles, California, US
Sensors for Sale
- Smp/standard th383 throttle position sensor-throttle position sensor (tps)(US $289.20)
- Denso 234-9007 air fuel ratio sensor-oe style air- fuel ratio sensor(US $135.89)
- Wd express 128 54023 102 mass air flow sensor-bosch new mass air flow sensor(US $149.42)
- 02-05 subaru impreza wrx rear oxygen sensor 02 senser bank 2 secondary oem (US $43.98)
- Beck arnley 180-0314 crank angle sensor-engine crankshaft position sensor(US $97.10)
- Beck arnley 180-0392 crank angle sensor-engine crankshaft position sensor(US $60.46)
Support For Fuel Duty Pothole Plan
Fri, 12 Sep 2014MORE than four in five people would support a plan in which money raised from fuel duty was used to repair potholed roads, research has found. Support is highest in eastern England, Wales and Yorkshire and Humberside, according to a survey by the Local Government Association (LGA). The LGA said the Treasury got £33 billion a year from fuel duty, while the Government was spending just under £2 billion a year on maintaining and improving roads over the next five years.
Fiat launches new MultiAir engines
Mon, 09 Mar 2009By Tim Pollard Motor Industry 09 March 2009 14:02 Fiat showed off the detail of its new MultiAir engines at the 2009 Geneva motor show – and we’ll finally be able to buy the tech on the new Alfa Romeo Mito supermini later in 2009. The brains behind the common-rail injection system that shook up diesel technology have now produced a new technology designed to make petrol engines more efficient and cleaner. Engineers claim the MultiAir engines – which use electrohydraulic actuation, rather than the more widely available electromechanical systems – boost power and torque, while cutting CO2 by between 10% and 25% and other pollutants by up to 60%.
VW eyes stake in Suzuki, report says
Mon, 21 Sep 2009Volkswagen looks to stake an ownership stake in Suzuki Motor Co. by the end of this year, according to a report in Automobilwoche, a sister publication of AutoWeek. "We expect that there will be a basic agreement this year," the German-language publication quoted an unnamed Suzuki executive as saying.