Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

05 Verucci Scooter 50cc 49 Qingqi - Lower Fairing Left on 2040-parts.com

US $25.00
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%

Peugeot Exalt concept (2014) updated for Paris motor show

Fri, 05 Sep 2014

By CJ Hubbard First Official Pictures 05 September 2014 16:47 Peugeot has updated its Exalt concept car for the 2014 Paris motor show. Compared to the version that appeared at the Beijing motor show in April, the revised Peugeot Exalt features a new colour scheme, new materials – and an electric scooter in the boot. To recap, the Exalt is a large saloon that follows on from the Onyx concept of 2012.

Melling Hellcat supercar (2007): first official pictures

Thu, 01 Feb 2007

By James Mullan First Official Pictures 01 February 2007 09:35 Bat out of hell: the Melling Hellcat Reading this on your computer screen almost certainly means that you’re sitting down. That’s good because you’re not going to believe the figures on Al Melling’s long-awaited Melling Hellcat supercar: a gut-wrenching 1175bhp and at least 275mph, making it potentially the world’s fastest road-legal production car. Yes, you did read that right – one thousand one hundred and seventy-five horses at your personal beck-and-call, capable of propelling this two-seater carbon-fibre-reinforced chariot from 0-60mph in a blink-and-you’ll-miss-it 2.6sec.

Indianapolis 500: HPD wins Louis Schwitzer Award for refueling system

Tue, 24 May 2011

Honda Performance Development on May 21 won the 45th-annual Louis Schwitzer Award for motorsports engineering innovation and excellence in recognition of the Honda Refueling Safety Interlock System. The system, which reduces the potential for fires in pit lane when refueling, was created by a team at HPD led by Roger Griffiths, Jim Goodloe, Marco Martinelli and Robert Bell. The key part of the system is an electronic fuel-probe sensor installed on an Indy-car's inlet valve into which ethanol fuel flows.