Purolator Expands into Meijer Supercenters
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By Counterman
link hidden, please login to view link hidden, please login to view link hidden, please login to view, the parent company of link hidden, please login to view, announced the addition of link hidden, please login to view to the BCA aftermarket product line. This latest new number announcement delivers expanded OE‑quality coverage for key Lexus, Toyota, and Mazda applications, representing more than 800,000 vehicles in operation across North America. “These new part numbers reinforce BCA’s commitment to coverage and OE‑quality performance in high‑value segments of the market,” said Matt Gorski, manager of product development, automotive aftermarket. “As import platforms continue to evolve, we remain focused on providing dependable solutions that help our customers capture replacement demand with confidence.”
The new additions strengthen BCA’s late‑model import coverage across key Lexus, Toyota, and Mazda platforms, including a growing mix of luxury, hybrid, and electric vehicles. By addressing both emerging electrified applications and sustained service demand in premium internal‑combustion models, this release further reinforces BCA’s ability to deliver durable, OE‑quality solutions for a broad and evolving segment of the aftermarket, the company said.
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By Counterman
link hidden, please login to view link hidden, please login to view link hidden, please login to view, the parent company of link hidden, please login to view, announced the addition of link hidden, please login to view to the BCA aftermarket product line. This latest new number announcement delivers expanded OE‑quality coverage for key Lexus, Toyota, and Mazda applications, representing more than 800,000 vehicles in operation across North America. “These new part numbers reinforce BCA’s commitment to coverage and OE‑quality performance in high‑value segments of the market,” said Matt Gorski, manager of product development, automotive aftermarket. “As import platforms continue to evolve, we remain focused on providing dependable solutions that help our customers capture replacement demand with confidence.”
The new additions strengthen BCA’s late‑model import coverage across key Lexus, Toyota, and Mazda platforms, including a growing mix of luxury, hybrid, and electric vehicles. By addressing both emerging electrified applications and sustained service demand in premium internal‑combustion models, this release further reinforces BCA’s ability to deliver durable, OE‑quality solutions for a broad and evolving segment of the aftermarket, the company said.
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By Counterman
Standard Motor Products Inc. (SMP) announced expanded coverage in multiple engine sensor categories. Advanced internal combustion engine systems such as variable valve timing and turbocharging depend on timely, accurate data from multiple sensors. SMP said its engine sensors are designed for accuracy, speed and durability, and each sensor is tested and validated for performance in extreme conditions.
Engine Sensor Categories and New Part Numbers
link hidden, please login to view engine sensor categories include camshaft position sensors, crankshaft position sensors, battery current and voltage sensors, mass air flow (MAF) sensors, manifold absolute pressure (MAP) sensors, coolant temperature sensors, throttle position sensors and fuel pressure sensors. Recent part number additions have expanded these categories. MAP sensors have been added for General Motors vehicles through the 2025 model year, as well as Ford vehicles such as the 2021 through 2025 F-150, 2018 to 2023 Transit Connect and 2021 to 2024 Bronco. MAF sensors are new for 2.2 million Lexus and Toyota vehicles, as well as Cadillac cars and SUVs through 2024. Coolant temperature sensors were recently introduced for vehicles such as the 2020 to 2023 Chevrolet Silverado and 2021 to 2023 GMC Yukon.
Multiple battery current and voltage sensors were recently added, introducing coverage for the 2020 to 2025 Nissan Sentra, 2018 to 2024 Jeep Wrangler, 2019 to 2023 Kia Soul and 2019 to 2025 Lexus ES300h. Additionally, engine oil level sensors have been introduced for more than 6 million Toyota and Lexus vehicles through the 2025 model year.
Testing and Validation
link hidden, please login to view said its engine sensors are subjected to extensive testing in the lab, on actual vehicles and at the end of the line to ensure quality. Camshaft and crankshaft position sensors undergo vibration testing for 48 to 68 hours on multiple planes for durability and are chamber tested from minus 40 °F to 257 °F for accuracy in all conditions. They are then validated on actual vehicles to help optimize the performance of fuel injection and variable valve timing systems. Each sensor is end of line tested for timing, pulse width and signal amplitude. “Standard offers thousands of precision engineered sensors in multiple categories, providing our trusted partners with the industry leading coverage they expect from us,” said John Herc, vice president of vehicle control marketing at SMP. “But we do not just stop at coverage; we design and test our engine sensors specifically for accuracy, speed and durability to keep modern vehicles operating as intended.”
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By Counterman
On the surface, the primary role of a parts professional is to help our customers identify and select the parts, supplies and services needed to complete a multitude of repairs. However, there are many other duties beyond simple cataloging exercises which separate a true parts professional from a key-punching cashier at the grocery checkout lane. Too often, the general public sees us as simple clerks, but when is the last time you asked a cashier at the register how to perfectly sear that ribeye you just paid for?
Our customer base may vary from store to store, but many of us deal with an eclectic mix of clientele each day. These patrons also come with varying levels of technical knowledge or abilities. For most of our commercial customers, we are already a trusted partner. Technicians have usually diagnosed and estimated the labor for a repair job before requesting our expertise, but still lean on their “go-to” parts specialist to get the correct components quoted correctly and delivered to them quickly. These customers “speak our language,” and we are expected to speak theirs, as well.
When it comes to the “decidedly DIY” segment of our business, many of the conversations we have can feel like more of a struggle. Often through no fault of their own, this portion of our population finds themselves tackling unfamiliar repair situations, or attempting to navigate diagnostic recommendations or repair instructions that seem to be written in a completely different language. Our daily interactions with repair professionals and coworkers, as well as our own life experiences, have helped us all to build a knowledge base which serves as one of the main reasons our individual services are in demand to begin with.
The average consumer views most auto parts as a commodity, so many of our widgets are “all the same” to them. As “car people,” we already know the differences between our products, which ones to recommend, and what we can reasonably expect from them. Even if we don’t physically install components or repair vehicles, we often have a pretty good sense of what it takes to perform the task required, and what else may need to be removed and replaced along the way to the goal of installing the parts we’re handing across the counter.
When dealing with a “less-technical” parts buyer, we must be prepared to spend a little more time at the counter or on the telephone. Drawing out all of the relevant information (and filtering out the irrelevant) is often the first step in determining the customer’s needs and intentions. If they already have a sense of direction, a portion of the conversation might be spent explaining (in layman’s terms) why triggering a particular OBD-II code does not automatically mean that they should buy part “X,” or deciphering what a customer means when they request “that round box with four wires, next to the square plastic piece under the left fender.”
Within the context of a popular subreddit (r/explainlikeimfive), we can convey fairly complex technical ideas without anyone feeling lost or talked down to. By avoiding jargon or acronyms, our language becomes more accessible for the uninitiated. Comparisons to everyday situations allow for us to find common ground in a discussion. The use of photos, diagrams, descriptive words and even sounds can make “the big picture” come into focus more sharply for nearly anyone. Once we discover a common language, our common purpose is suddenly much clearer!
The post
link hidden, please login to view appeared first on link hidden, please login to view.
link hidden, please login to view -
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By Counterman
On the surface, the primary role of a parts professional is to help our customers identify and select the parts, supplies and services needed to complete a multitude of repairs. However, there are many other duties beyond simple cataloging exercises which separate a true parts professional from a key-punching cashier at the grocery checkout lane. Too often, the general public sees us as simple clerks, but when is the last time you asked a cashier at the register how to perfectly sear that ribeye you just paid for?
Our customer base may vary from store to store, but many of us deal with an eclectic mix of clientele each day. These patrons also come with varying levels of technical knowledge or abilities. For most of our commercial customers, we are already a trusted partner. Technicians have usually diagnosed and estimated the labor for a repair job before requesting our expertise, but still lean on their “go-to” parts specialist to get the correct components quoted correctly and delivered to them quickly. These customers “speak our language,” and we are expected to speak theirs, as well.
When it comes to the “decidedly DIY” segment of our business, many of the conversations we have can feel like more of a struggle. Often through no fault of their own, this portion of our population finds themselves tackling unfamiliar repair situations, or attempting to navigate diagnostic recommendations or repair instructions that seem to be written in a completely different language. Our daily interactions with repair professionals and coworkers, as well as our own life experiences, have helped us all to build a knowledge base which serves as one of the main reasons our individual services are in demand to begin with.
The average consumer views most auto parts as a commodity, so many of our widgets are “all the same” to them. As “car people,” we already know the differences between our products, which ones to recommend, and what we can reasonably expect from them. Even if we don’t physically install components or repair vehicles, we often have a pretty good sense of what it takes to perform the task required, and what else may need to be removed and replaced along the way to the goal of installing the parts we’re handing across the counter.
When dealing with a “less-technical” parts buyer, we must be prepared to spend a little more time at the counter or on the telephone. Drawing out all of the relevant information (and filtering out the irrelevant) is often the first step in determining the customer’s needs and intentions. If they already have a sense of direction, a portion of the conversation might be spent explaining (in layman’s terms) why triggering a particular OBD-II code does not automatically mean that they should buy part “X,” or deciphering what a customer means when they request “that round box with four wires, next to the square plastic piece under the left fender.”
Within the context of a popular subreddit (r/explainlikeimfive), we can convey fairly complex technical ideas without anyone feeling lost or talked down to. By avoiding jargon or acronyms, our language becomes more accessible for the uninitiated. Comparisons to everyday situations allow for us to find common ground in a discussion. The use of photos, diagrams, descriptive words and even sounds can make “the big picture” come into focus more sharply for nearly anyone. Once we discover a common language, our common purpose is suddenly much clearer!
The post
link hidden, please login to view appeared first on link hidden, please login to view.
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