#1960 - 2013 13 Honda Cbr 500r Damaged Radiator With Fan 158 Miles on 2040-parts.com
Phoenix, Arizona, US
Brakes & Suspension for Sale
- #1960 - 2013 13 honda cbr 500r factory exhaust muffler 158 miles(US $27.99)
- #1960 - 2013 13 honda cbr 500r rear tail fairing 158 miles(US $39.99)
- #1960 - 2013 13 honda cbr 500r center light 158 miles(US $14.99)
- #1960 - 2013 13 honda cbr 500r passenger seat 158 miles(US $49.99)
- #1960 - 2013 13 honda cbr 500r side plastic moldings 158 miles(US $26.99)
- #1960 - 2013 13 honda cbr 500r right foot peg & rear brake 158 miles(US $49.99)
The Designers, Pt.12 – Ed Welburn, General Motors
Mon, 28 Jul 2014Car Design News launched its first-ever Car Design Review yearbook at the Geneva Motor Show, featuring the award-winning Production Car and Concept Car Designs of 2013. If you're interested in buying a copy of the 160-page yearbook this interview appears in, alongside trend reports, bespoke car design infographics and a special feature on Marcello Gandini, our inaugural Lifetime Achievement Award winner, Car Design Review can be purchased here. Name Ed WelburnRole General Motors VP global designAge, nationality 63, USLocation Michigan, USAEducation Howard University "From a car-design-industry perspective, 2013 was good but not great.
Inside Bob Pond's car collection
Fri, 30 May 2014Robert Pond was an industrialist, an aviator, a Navy pilot, an aircraft designer, a genuine car enthusiast, a philanthropist, a Minnesotan at heart and a man who turned a family business from eight employees to a global $100-million concern. Pond was born in 1924 in Edina, Minn., 10 miles southwest of Minneapolis. He signed up for the Navy Air Corps in 1942, and survived three years of training on J-3 Piper Cubs and PBY Catalinas to graduate in July of 1945 -- just three months before Japan surrendered to the US.
MPG or performance: It's a trade with turbos
Mon, 10 Jun 2013Some automakers say turbochargers offer high fuel economy and quick acceleration, the best of both worlds. Well, yes and no. Turbocharged vehicles allow automakers to keep power output high while they downsize engines for better fuel economy.