Gauges for Sale
- 1972 honda 350 gauges(US $25.00)
- 2006 suzuki sv650s speedometer(US $100.00)
- 98 99 kawasaki zx9r zx9 gauges cluster tach *new*(US $100.00)
- Dakota digital - mcl-3207-r - mcl-3200 series direct plug-in instrument system(US $280.00)
- 1989? yamaha streetbike instrument cluster speedometer gauges odometer(US $42.00)
- 2004 2005 suzuki gsxr 600 750 gauge tach rpm speedometer cluster 16k miles z344(US $199.99)
Callum: JLR needs design studios in China and US
Thu, 25 Oct 2012Jaguar and Land Rover are to open design studios in China and the United States as the two British brands look to better understand local tastes, according to Ian Callum, Jaguar Design Director in an interview with Automotive News Europe. The United States is currently the carmaker's second-biggest market after the UK, closely followed by China in third. To further tap into these markets is key for the long-term success of JLR and so it is following its competitors in opening up foreign design studios.
MINI Speedster back on the cards
Tue, 07 Apr 2009Mini Speedster from 2001 - looks set to form the basis of a new MINI Speedster Based on the MINI platform, the Speedster version was talked about as long ago as 2001, but never made it to production on the first MINI platform. But perhaps having now covered just about every variant they can think of, BMW has decided that now is the time to revive the car and get it in to production. Small Roadsters, in the vein of the old British open-topped 2 seater ( and its modern ‘Homage’ version – the MX-5) will, I’m sure, see something of a renaissance in the next few years as people start to turn away from big, profligate cars, but still seek some fun motoring.
Bentley sales returned to pre-recession levels in 2011
Tue, 03 Jan 2012The new Continental GTC helped Bentley sales hit highs in 2011 Bentley has seen sales in 2011 return to the levels of 2007, with sales up by 37 percent over 2010. China is now Bentley’s second biggest market. It doesn’t seem five minutes since Bentley were getting their highly skilled workforce to make furniture to keep them busy, so slow were sales as the recession started to bite.