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Instrument Panel Light Bulb-osram Rear/front Wd Express 882 33027 344 on 2040-parts.com

US $15.95
Location:

Lynbrook, New York, United States

Lynbrook, New York, United States
Condition:New Quantity Sold:sold individually Interchange Part Number:33195, 2821, 78 272, 000 544 67 94, 882 33027 344 SKU:WDX:882 33027 344 ItemWeight:0.06 Brand:WD Express Remanufactured (Y/N):N Manufacturer Part Number:882 33027 344 Country of Origin (Primary):DE Engineering Name:Instrument Panel Light Bulb UPC:Does not apply

Exclusive: The Designers Pt1 – Gorden Wagener, Mercedes-Benz

Fri, 09 May 2014

Car Design News launched its first ever Car Design Review yearbook at the Geneva motor show, featuring the award-winning Production Car and Concept Car Designs of 2013. Over the next three months we'll be publishing – in their own words – world-exclusive interviews with the 12 professional design judges involved in these awards, featuring their individual votes, their views on the year just gone plus their hopes for the year ahead. Kicking off the series is vice-president of design for Mercedes-Benz, Gorden Wagener, talking up the global recovery, exciting new Mercedes design studios and why a certain Pininfarina coupé was his favorite concept of 2013...

New VW Golf GTI: Price from £25,845

Thu, 04 Apr 2013

Volkswagen has revealed that the 2013 Golf GTI MK 7 will cost from £25,845 – £195 up on the old GTI – with the GTi Performance from £26,825. For the first time you’ll get a choice of power levels for the GTI, with the regular GTI getting a 2.0 litre TSI with 217bhp and the GTI Performance coming with 227bhp, gets bigger brake discs and a limited slip diff. Performance from the regular GTI is 0-62mph in 6.5 seconds and a top speed of 152mph, whilst the GTI Performance cuts that time by 0.1 seconds with both versions offering 44.1mpg official consumption with the six-speed manual ‘box.

Government abandons plan to make driving test tougher

Sat, 24 May 2014

Proposals to make learning to drive much tougher in a bid to improve road safety amongst young people have been abandoned by the government, Radio 1’s Newsbeat reports. The changes would have involved the introduction of a probationary licence for the first 12 months, a curfew on driving late at night and compulsory lessons on motorway driving. But plans have been scraped because they would restrict young drivers’ lives too much.