Item is a Rear Rotor off a 2008 Honda CBR 600 RR with 8,200 miles. Item is in great shape, with no rash. Item is used and does show signs of wear but is ready to be installed with no issues. please don't hesitate to contact me if you have questions. Paypal Only
Brakes & Suspension for Sale
04 honda crf250x complete rear brake system, master cylinder, caliper, hose(US $40.00)
1984 honda goldwing gl1200 rear shocks(US $60.00)
2007 suzuki gsxr 600 750 front forks suspension straight oem nice 06 07(US $275.00)
06 07 08 09 zx-14 front forks(US $265.00)
2006 2007 2008 harley touring street glide flhx front wheel, dual rotors & tire(US $149.95)
Honda xr400 throttle tube w/ cables xr 400 2003 mint(US $41.99)
Scrappage: US to get Cash for Clunkers
Wed, 10 Jun 2009The US is to get their own Scrappage Scheme - Cash for Clunkers So even though our Scrappage Scheme is pretty flawed, it may well be having an impact – at least until the relatively modest amount set-aside for the scheme by the Government is exhausted. And now it’s the turn of the US to launch a Scrappage Schem – Cash for Clunkers. Cash for Clunkers legislation was passed yesterday in the US to try and kick-start US car sales, and give a boost to beleaguered car makers like GM and Chrysler.
Hyundai plots brave new MPV future
Fri, 24 Oct 2008By Jed Maxwell Motor Industry 24 October 2008 09:00 Hyundai’s president believes his firm’s future lies in MPVs and more derivatives of its existing models. Kun-Hee Ahn, chief of the Korean firm’s European operation said: 'The world is currently a very unfriendly place for SUVs. For us the future has two directions.
Avoiding the California Highway Patrol on the Autoweek America Adventure
Sun, 30 Oct 2011"Damn revenuers," said Tommy Kendall. "They are draped all along the side of the road." He spoke, of course, about the California Highway Patrol, whose strategically positioned cars--and subsequent laser-detection devices and KA-band radar--were lighting up this two-lane south of Klamath Falls, Ore., less than two miles inside the state line. It's a fact of economics, especially in California, a state that's running out of money faster than Greece.