Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Suzuki Gs500f Gs500 Gs500e Gs 500 2001-2009 Choke Cable / Starter Cable 100358 on 2040-parts.com

US $24.99
Location:

Long Beach, California, US

Long Beach, California, US
Item must be returned within:14 Days Refund will be given as:Money Back Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Restocking Fee:No Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Return policy details:

Choke Cable.  This is from a 2001-2009 Suzuki GS500...shows wear from normal use unless stated otherwise...

Shipping to Alaska and Hawaii may be slightly higher... 

IT IS BEING SOLD "AS IS" WITH NO WARRANTY. ONLY SERIOUS BIDS. WILL ACCEPT PAYPAL,  OR CREDIT CARD. THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA REQUIRES US TO CHARGE SALES TAX TO CALIFORNIA RESIDENTS.  WILL NOT RELEASE PART UNTIL IT IS PAID IN FULL.

 

stock# 100358

Interior Motives Design Awards 2013 deadline this Friday

Wed, 10 Apr 2013

The deadline for entries to the Interior Motives Design Awards is Friday 12th April. You have just three more days to have your work evaluated by some of the most influential figures in the automotive design industry, including Volkswagen's Romulus Rost and Wolfgang-Müller-Pietralla, and Amko Leenarts and David Woodhouse of Ford. Should your project reach the final round of judging, it will be displayed at a glamorous awards ceremony in Frankfurt on 9th September, the eve of the first Frankfurt Motor Show press day.

Ford's NA Design Director aims to shorten product lifecycles

Wed, 16 Jul 2008

Peter Horbury, Ford Motor Company North America Design Director, has told Automotive News he intends to shorten product lifecycles at the ailing company from an average five years to three years starting this decade. "We feel there is no value in minor changes but a huge value in major changes," Horbury told the industry weekly. Ford needs to ensure that buyers continue visiting showrooms as the giant automaker struggles to retain market share.

Concept Car of the Week: Nissan Nails (2001)

Fri, 08 Mar 2013

Japan's unique culture and lifestyle provides a fertile environment for some of the strangest ideas to blossom. The oddly named Nissan Nails is one of these eccentric concepts that shows typical Japanese thinking. Halfway between Gundam and a Pokemon, it was designed in Creative Box.