Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Custom Radio Flyer Wagon Race Kart Wheel/hub Adaptors (red Anodized) on 2040-parts.com

US $135.00
Location:

Kittanning, Pennsylvania, United States

Kittanning, Pennsylvania, United States
Condition:Used Brand:Radio Flyer


* Set of new hubs and new adaptors to put Race Kart wheels and tires on your Radio Flyer Wagon. 

* Just in time for your winter/Xmas project.

* These are not the ones with set screws, that constantly come loose. No welding required, no cutting off old axles, simple install, tighten loc collar and there on and ready for your wheels and tires. (American bolt pattern).

* Wagon, wheels, tires not included. Just shown to give you an idea of looks.


* 8.95 shipping to lower 48 states. No apo's or po boxes. 



MP claims 3p for 100 metre car trip

Mon, 07 Oct 2013

FORMER DEFENCE secretary Liam Fox successfully claimed 3p of taxpayers' cash for a car journey of fewer than 100 metres, expenses documents show. The Conservative MP made the claim after travelling 0.06 miles, or approximately 96.5 metres, within his North Somerset constituency from a concrete firm to a constituency surgery in Yatton in October 2012. The Independent Parliamentary Standards Authority (Ipsa) notes the claim was paid last December.

Five most-watched car ads of 2011

Thu, 15 Dec 2011

Page views: They're life and death on the Web, and for an automaker trying to make an advertisement go viral, page views and the eyeballs viewing them are what it's all about. This year was big for the top-five viral automaker ads: Volkswagen's “The Force” spot hit 63 million views, while Fiat grabbed 27 million with its Jennifer Lopez song. The Chrysler “Imported From Detroit” Super Bowl ad was next, with 22 million views.

This day in Autoweek history: Driving across France in a Ford Sierra RS Cosworth

Fri, 23 Sep 2011

Today we relive a drive across France in the Ford Sierra Sapphire RS Cosworth with Cynthia Claes. This potent four-door sedan offered rear-wheel drive, a Borg-Warner five-speed manual transmission and a claimed top speed of 150 mph from its turbocharged 2.0-liter, twin-cam four-cylinder engine. Introduced in 1986, the original Sierra saw 5,542 units constructed; 5,000 were needed for homologation in Class A rally competition, its original purpose.