1 Premium New Disc Brake Rotor For Front Fits Left Driver / Right Passenger Side on 2040-parts.com
ON, CA
Discs, Rotors & Hardware for Sale
- 1 premium new disc brake rotor for rear fits left driver & right passenger side(US $23.98)
- 1 premium new disc brake rotor for front fits left driver / right passenger side(US $34.51)
- 1 premium new disc brake rotor for front fits left driver / right passenger side(US $46.97)
- 1 premium new disc brake rotor for front fits left driver / right passenger side(US $47.66)
- 2 front brake rotors pair for ford ranger - 1998, 1999, 2000 |r64061(US $47.76)
- 1 premium new disc brake rotor for rear fits left driver & right passenger side(US $33.42)
Infiniti M35 Hybrid: first official photos
Thu, 08 Oct 2009By Tim Pollard First Official Pictures 08 October 2009 16:16 We've known it's coming, but here is the first look at Infiniti's new petrol electric exec: the M35 Hybrid. As signalled by the Essence concept car, Infiniti is keen to stress that its hybrid cars won't be just about saving pennies – they'll be fun to drive too. Sounds like a dig at sensible old Lexus to us.The new Infiniti M35 Hybrid will be the upmarket Nissan arm's first hybrid in its 20 years of building exec rivals to the default Audis, BMWs and Mercedes.
New 2014-2015 Volkswagen Passat and Passat Estate details and pictures revealed
Fri, 04 Jul 2014Volkswagen has released the first details of the new eighth-generation Passat, which goes on sale in the UK and Europe before the end of 2014. The new VW Passat is lower, lighter, up to 20% more fuel-efficient and much more striking to look at. Could this be the Passat to tempt you out of that BMW 3 Series?
1960s supercars
Thu, 10 Jul 2008By Tim Pollard and Ben Oliver 10 July 2008 16:00 Supercars in the Sixties The swinging ’60s spawned many joyous things – and its spirit of liberalisation applied equally to the motor car. So we shouldn’t be surprised that it was the fun-filled decade that begat the supercar. The Lamborghini Miura was arguably first – and CAR’s own wizard of words, LJK Setright, penned the phrase that defined the breed: he called it the supercar.