This was posted 1 year 2 months 4 days ago, and might be an out-dated deal.

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15% off suspension, underbody, and driveline auto parts (Max $100 off) & free delivery @ Febest Auto Parts eBay

51
FEBESTCOMAU

FEBEST is a chinese OEM part manufacturer that may make parts for your car cheaper than you can get them from most other suppliers. Well distributed and supported from Campbelfield in Victoria.

Great if your vehicle has old or worn parts and you are on a tight budget. Do it properly, and this can get you a great result.

The parts available are:
Euro-centric, so may not be anything for local models like Falcon, Magna, etc. (Sorry @YourakHunt, defo nothing for the glorious AU Falcon, mate)
Not the best, but not the worst.
Not OE quality
Usually better than parts from no-name brands, the average aftermarket part sold as 'OEM, or 'Original Equipment Manufacture', and vendors claiming parts are 'OEM', made to 'OEM' specs, OEM quality, etc. - Febest parts are not certainly not genuine, or original equipment on any car I've seen.
Anyone with experience otherwise, do share!

FEBEST claims 193,355 items in this offer
Search for the parts you need and check they'll fit using the VIN number of your car.
Even the same production run and model can use different parts to others that seem the same.

15% OFF when you use code FEBESTCOMAU at checkout
Max discount $100
Terms and Conditions
Use a professional to do the work if you want to know it's safe and done properly.

  • EDITED for those that expect any vendor using the term OEM (correctly or otherwise) are only offering Genuine, or OE parts for their car.

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closed Comments

  • +1

    OEM part manufacturer
    Not OE quality

    Which is it?

    • -3

      Basically OEM quality, defo not like genuine (OE parts).

      • OEM is genuine so you obviously have no clue what you are talking about. Had a look through and it looks like the cheapest quality parts that I would not even consider putting in my car. Better off importing genuine parts for the same price if not cheaper.

        • -2

          A simple check somewhere might help

          Everyone calls their parts OEM. Aftermarket manufacturers all claim they make to OEM specification, and supply to some manufacturer somewhere, so call themselves an OEM supplier but as you can see the line is grey, especially when they make replacement parts for every car on the planet.

          These are just replacements though, not upgrade parts. And they are not Original Equipment, or Genuine quality, as I'm trying very hard to make clear.

          • +3

            @resisting the urge: OEM refers to the manufacturer of the original equipment. What you are referring to is simply after-market parts since this company is not the original manufacturer. This is common knowledge.

            • -2

              @RhythmicJAY28: OEM does not refer to the manufacturer at all. It more correctly refers to "Original Equipment Manufacture"

              And there is good reason: We simply can't refer to any brand as 'the OEM' when talking about multiple parts, because no one manufacturer supplies all the parts for any model. At most, only one two can make the Original part, (or genuine), as you keep saying.

              So you won't find an actual OEM part advertised unless the vendor is specific about the model they are made for, at the very least. What makes it so confusing is that parts are also made by other OEMs (who in turn are making parts for other models on other production lines) that mimic the originals, and are all termed OEM parts. These are supplied only to the aftermarket, and are certainly not genuine- but because an OEM makes them, people start calling them OEM parts. This is why the terms are conflated so often.

              So you have Original Equipment, Original Equipment Manufacture, and aftermarket. Febest supply the aftermarket, but like many others, are all supplying manufacturers OE parts, so you can easily find their parts termed OEM, or with references to OEM. Once a manufacturer (not just the brand they are boxed in and sold under) supplies some parts used on an assembly line, somewhere, they are an OEM.

              The right way to use the term OEM is to say OEM quality, or made to OEM specifications, but to say a part is actually the OEM part you absolutely have to know who made the ones used on that date, on that vehicle, and oftentimes, on which production line. And then you have to verify that the parts they supply the aftermarket later are indeed identical to the ones supplied to the production line, as their customer may require different quality controls on the items supplied to, and/or branded for, them.

  • Dont see any deals here

    • What were you searching for? I usually find them alright, even good

  • zero results for Magna
    .

    • Thanks for saying so @Nugs.

      I think their retail ops are based in Germany, and they likely don't supply much for models not sold in the euro market. Will make that clearer in the ad.

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