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02 Suzuki Bandit 600 S - Plate Pickup Coil Pulsar on 2040-parts.com

US $45.00
Location:

Melbourne, Florida, US

Melbourne, Florida, US
Item must be returned within:14 Days Refund will be given as:Money Back Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Return policy details:Refunds will be issued for the price of the item Only, Less 20% restocking fee for Returns made at Buyers request. Shipping charges are not refundable Except if the item was not as described. Item cancellations are subject to fee of 5% of total paid for each item canceled but not shipped minimum fee is $2.50 Once items have left our shop the fee is as stated above (20%) Restocking Fee:10%

Ford at Geneva Motor Show: Ford Focus Estate (2011)

Mon, 01 Mar 2010

The 2011 Ford Focus Estate gets revealed this week at Geneva Ford are busy delivering cars based on their new C–Segment platform to the market. We saw the 2011 Ford Focus arrive at the Detroit Motor Show at the start of the year. Prior to that we saw the C-Max and Grand C-Max at Frankfurt in September.

Kia Carens MPV (2012) first official pictures

Wed, 19 Sep 2012

Kia has taken its compact family wagon, the Carens back to the drawing board with the release of the all-new 2012 model, bringing it up-to-date with Kia’s current design direction.   The Carens is the last model in Kia’s line up to receive the ‘tiger nose’ facelift under the direction of chief designer Peter Schreyer, best known for designing the Mk 1 Audi TT.   The revised Carens takes on a sharper, more ‘athletic’ shape than the former chunkier model, offering a more practical, cab-forward take on the sportier looking new Ceed on which it is based.

Video: Yasushi Nakamuta on Mazda 3's 'unique' design process

Wed, 03 Jul 2013

It may be leaden with PR-talk but this short presentation by Yasushi Nakamuta, Mazda's director of advanced design studio at the press unveiling of the new Mazda 3 in Melbourne is still worth a couple of minutes of your time. But while the 3 is undeniably attractive we can't help but feel that the 'unique' design process Nakamuta describes (which appears wholly conventional to us) has resulted in little more than a thoroughly normal product. Take a look for yourself at the video to your left.