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Super Jack - Remote Control Hydraulic Jack on 2040-parts.com

US $49.99
Location:

Camp Hill, Pennsylvania, US

Camp Hill, Pennsylvania, US
Returns Accepted:ReturnsNotAccepted Part Brand:Super Jack

Micro Super Car Jack! Simply plug it into your dash board cigarette lighter, point the infrared remote control, and presto the jack raises the vehicle effortlessly and your tire is changed in no time.

Raise your vehicle 6 inches effortlessly and instantly.

Forged steel gears and shaft, and aluminum housing, are oil built for years of use. Built to last!

 12 volt cigarette lighter plug with 12 foot extension cord to reach any area of your vehicle.

Infrared key chain remote saves hassles, keeps you off your knees, no grease no mess.

Bentley Continental GTC V8 Convertible at Geneva

Mon, 05 Mar 2012

Bentley Continental GTC V8 - Geneva debut The convertible version of the V8-engined Continental GT has arrived in Geneva as the Bentley Continental GTC V8. The Detroit Motor Show at the end of last year saw the arrival of the Bentley Continental GT V8, but the Geneva Motor Show this week is the venue for its drop-top sibling with the debut of the Bentley Continental GTC V8, a car we spied as long ago as last summer. With the same 4.0 litre V8 the GT V8 gets, the new GTC V8 gives little away to its tin-top sibling, with 0-62mph coming up in 4.7 seconds (down 0.1 on the coupe) and top speed hitting 187mph (188mph for the coupe).

2013 Kia cee’d Sportswagon price from £16,895

Mon, 10 Sep 2012

The new Kia cee’d Sportswagon (Estate) goes on sale in the UK today priced from £16,895 with engine and trim options as the cee’d. Kia updated the cee’d – the car most know best from Top Gear’s SIARPC – earlier this year, and now we get the arrival of the estate version – the Kia cee’d Sportswagon – in UK Kia’s showrooms. In all the ways that matter, the cee’d Sportswagon is simply the new cee’d with an extra bit bolted on the back.

Ford taps programs, in-car technology to aid teen driving

Tue, 11 Jun 2013

Teenage boys are more likely to neglect their seatbelts, while teenage girls will get distracted by passengers more often, according to a recent study from Ford. Ford commissioned Penn Schoen Berland to survey 500 teens and 500 parents about teen driving habits and perceptions. In addition to comparing boys and girls, the survey found that both parents and teen drivers believe winter is the most dangerous season for driving.