1975-1979 Arctic Cat Lynx 2000 F/a Snowmobile Spi Throttle Cable on 2040-parts.com
Indiana, US, United States
Gauges & Cables for Sale
- 2002-2003 polaris 550 classic snowmobile spi throttle cable(US $33.82)
- 2005 yamaha rs venture 4-stroke choke cable rage vector(US $10.99)
- 2005 yamaha rs venture 4-stroke throttle cable rage vector 8es-26311-00-00(US $11.99)
- 2006 polaris fusion 700 brake line hose cable classic ho touring rmk 2202929(US $12.99)
- Spi speedometer cable for yamaha 1994-96 v-max 500 600 replaces 8ab-83550-00-00(US $15.95)
- Arctic cat 0620-342 speedometer lcd-08 f series-calib-dlx textron sno pro f5 f6(US $753.95)
Changan opens new European Designing Center in Turin
Wed, 05 Dec 2012Changan celebrated the opening of its European Designing Center in Turin, Italy, last week as part of its celebration of the historic company's 150th anniversary. An audience of VIP guests and press were given grand tour of the new facility located in Rivoli near Turin after an opening ceremony filled with the pomp and pageantry we've come to expect from the Chinese car industry. The new 11,000 square meter European Designing Center is Changan's latest move to grow its business globally, having already established research and development centers at five Chinese locations as well as in Detroit USA, Nottingham UK, and Yokohama Japan.
Vauxhall Insignia VXR Unlimited Option
Thu, 05 May 2011Vauxhall Insignia VXR - now good for 170mph We like the Vauxhall Insignia; it’s a very good car. We like it even more in better-than-warm Vauxhall Insignia VRX guise, where this warmed-over rep-mobile manages to pick up its skirts and scoot to 60mph in 5.6 seconds. Which is all rather appealing.
Peter Stevens and Julian Thomson lead a discussion on the past, present and future of car design
Fri, 24 May 2013As part of its sponsorship of London's Clerkenwell Design Week, Jaguar and the Royal College of Art brought together three generations of the design school to discuss the past, present and possible future of car design. Held in a suitably grimy warehouse in east London – with the sculpture by RCA students Ewan Gallimore and Claire Mille's we showed you earlier this week sat outside – Professor Dale Harrow, dean of the School of Design and head of its Vehicle Design program introduced Professor Peter Stevens, Julian Thomson, Jaguar's advanced design director and Alexandra Palmowski project designer advanced colour and material at Jaguar took the audience through their careers. Charismatic as ever, Peter Stevens kicked off proceedings that moved chronologically through the decades by explaining how he first became interested in "the art if car design, allied to the science of how they work" through his artistic parents and uncle – journalist and motoring adventurer – Denis Jenkinson during the 1950s and 60s.