New Sweatshirt great for the cold winter days!
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Sweats & Hoodies for Sale
- Ski-doo sweatshirt(US $30.00)
- Arctic cat men's wildcat full zip hoodie sweatshirt white atv utv mens xl nwt(US $32.99)
- Arctic cat / tucker hibbert apparel - men's t-train 68 hoodie - black - 5263-18_(US $34.99)
- Arctic cat men's team arctic flag hoodie sweatshirt pullover - orange - 5269-65_(US $32.99)
- Arctic cat women's team arctic flannel zip-up hoodie sweatshirt - black 5253-41_(US $33.99)
- New klim snowmobile jersey mens small(US $30.00)
Chevy Volt production stopped as sales falter
Sat, 03 Mar 2012Chevy Volt production halted General Motors has announced that they’re halting production of the range-extender Chevrolet Volt as sales falter. The Chevy Volt is General Motors’ car of the future (and sister car to the Vauxhall Ampera) with a range extender engine and the ability to run on a plug-in charge. And GM proclaimed it as the future of the company and did everything they could to keep costs in check.
Euro NCAP latest
Wed, 28 Feb 2007By Jack Carfrae Motor Industry 28 February 2007 10:12 Euro NCAP releases results on five new models Should Euro NCAP recalibrate its results? We suspect it should, as virtually every new car launched these days scores a high four- or five-star overall rating for occupant protection. The new results announced today are no different: Small family carsFiat Bravo: 5 stars (occupant safety), 3 stars (child safety), 2 stars (pedestrian safety) Toyota Corolla saloon: 5 stars (occupant), 4 stars (children), 3 stars (pedestrian) Small off-roaders Honda CR-V: 4 stars (occupant), 4 stars (children), 2 stars (pedestrian) Mitsubishi Outlander: 4 stars (occupant), 3 stars (children), 2 stars (pedestrian) Executive Honda Legend: 5 stars (occupant), 4 stars (children), 3 stars (pedestrian) Dig below the surface, though, and several disappointments emerge.
BMW plotting a hydrogen fuel cell EV
Fri, 02 Aug 2013The BMW i3 EV (pictured) will eventually be joined by a hydrogen fuel cell BMW BMW has now taken its first fully-fledged step in to the electric car market with the BMW i3, revealed in full earlier this week. The i3 is a properly competent offering from BMW and it seems likely that, despite a price pushing on £30k even after the taxpayer bribe for EVs, that they will find a ready market in their affluent customer base for the i3 as a second (or third, or fourth…) car for local runarounds. BMW has even managed to negate range anxiety by offering the option of a range-extender engine in the i3 – basically a BMW motorcycle engine to charge the battery when it runs out of juice – so BMW’s customers who may wish to use their i3 for more than just a trip the shops can do so without getting stranded.