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I have a 2012 crosstour . I was driving last week and the truck in front of me hit a 2x4 and threw it into the air . It came to a stop on my hood . Well the problem is I can’t find a crosstour hood only accord.
I had a hit & run give damage to my crosstour and searched a used dealer (all the way in N.C.) to get replacement parts at a good price. U may find a rear crash victim in a junk yard. Google:I have a 2012 crosstour . I was driving last week and the truck in front of me hit a 2x4 and threw it into the air . It came to a stop on my hood . Well the problem is I can’t find a crosstour hood only accord.
See if you can get a Canadian hood. Mine is. Probably the same. Check with Buy&Sell Vancouver. They also sell new 2022 rigs.I have a 2012 crosstour . I was driving last week and the truck in front of me hit a 2x4 and threw it into the air . It came to a stop on my hood . Well the problem is I can’t find a crosstour hood only accord.
I'm not sure, but the OP headline cracked me up.😁I have a 2012 crosstour . I was driving last week and the truck in front of me hit a 2x4 and threw it into the air . It came to a stop on my hood . Well the problem is I can’t find a crosstour hood only accord.
Do you know what suspension components might be different? I’m trying to find an aftermarket set of bushings to replace my current ones at 150,000 miles.Yes, the Accord hood will fit, in fact, starting with the side doors on forward, everything is the same. Most of the mechanical components are the same as well. The only major mechanical difference I can think of that MIGHT be different, is suspension, and all wheel drive components, but I could easily be wrong about that. When the vehicle was originally released, it's name was "Accord Crosstour", and as we already are aware, the Accord name was dropped from the car's name, probably just to save a few dollars in production, one less emblem. $25USD's for each emblem times the total number of vehicles built = ????? It doesn't sound like a lot at the consumer level, but from the corporate view, this could be tens, even hundreds of thousands of dollars that they probably didn't want to pass onto the consumers.
Unfortunately, I do not know. It would probably be best for you to call a few auto parts stores, and maybe even a dealership, to get pricing, and part numbers. The dealership's pricing will probably be more expensive, and they will often tell you that third party, or aftermarket parts are not of the same quality as OEM, which may or may not be true.Do you know what suspension components might be different? I’m trying to find an aftermarket set of bushings to replace my current ones at 150,000 miles.