When to paste the alphanumeric code, when to use the figure diagram, and how to send us a photo if both fail.

What you will gain from this guide

  • Part codes beat model names for accuracy
  • Figure diagrams help when the label is missing
  • WhatsApp photos speed up identification

Wrong parts are expensive twice — once when you buy, again when the vehicle sits idle. We built search around part codes for that reason, but diagrams still matter when the label is gone.

Search by part code (fastest)

  1. Open part search.
  2. Type the code from the old component — include letters and dashes exactly as printed.
  3. Open the result, check the photo and price, confirm stock, add to cart.

If search returns nothing, try without spaces or ask us — superseded numbers are common on older Traveller and Tata lines.

Browse by brand and figure

Start at the brand gallery, pick your vehicle line, then open a category ( belts, brakes, seals ). Figure pages list every catalogued line with code and price. This mirrors the paper catalogue workshops used for years — just clickable.

When you only have a photo

WhatsApp a clear shot of the label and another of the part on the bench. Include variant name if you know it ( e.g. Traveller 3350 ). We answer faster with context than with “need clutch for Force” alone.

Error codes

Dashboard warnings on Force platforms? Try our error code lookup for guidance — it links to common parts, not magic fixes.

Once you have the code, search and checkout — or read how to read part labels if the stamping is worn.

Ready to order parts?

Search by part number, browse offers, or contact our team for help identifying the right component.