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Subaru Oem 22641aa280 Oxygen Sensor on 2040-parts.com

US $189.90
Location:

Bangor, Maine, US

Bangor, Maine, US
Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Refund will be given as:Money Back Item must be returned within:30 Days Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Restocking Fee:No Genuine OEM:Yes Part Brand:SUBARU OEM Manufacturer Part Number:22641AA280 SME:_3161 Part Ref# on Diagram:ONLY PART REFERENCE #8 ON THE DIAGRAM IS INCLUDED

Range Rover Sport SVR takes on the Nurburgring – and wins (video)

Wed, 30 Jul 2014

Range Rover Sport SVR takes on the Nurburgring – and wins (video) We’re not sure at what point a car actually becomes a ‘production’ car, but that’s a tag Land Rover are putting on the new Range Rover Sport SVR as it takes to the Nurburgring and comes away with a time of 8 minutes 14 seconds – the fastest by a production SUV. Land Rover are keen to tell us the lap by the RRS SVR was in a standard production car, by which we assume a car that’s built to the specification announced for the Sport SVR when it arrives next year. That means the full fat 542bhp from its 5.0 litre V8 and performance that is clearly impressive, although Land Rover still hasn’t given us specific performance figures, and certainly enough - together with suspension tweaks – to make it very impressive on road.

Porsche purchases Andial performance brand

Thu, 14 Feb 2013

Porsche announced on Thursday that it has purchased the legendary Andial name that has become a staple in the realm of Porsche racing and performance tuning. In 1975, the late Arnold Wagner (AN), Dieter Inzenhofer (DI), and former Porsche Motorsport North America president and current consultant Alwin Springer (AL) came together to build Andial (an anagram of the principals names), a successful and respected independent authority on Porsche-performance tuning. Since the last active owner, Inzenhofer, is retiring later this month, timing was ripe for Porsche to jump in and offer to carry the Andial torch.

Get ready for the New GM

Thu, 09 Jul 2009

Unless there is some sort of major, unforeseen hiccup, the sale of General Motors' assets--creating a new company--is expected to close Friday. The new GM will be 60.8 percent owned by the U.S. Treasury.