1977 Skidoo 340 Everest Electric Parts: Both Ski Leaf Springs And Spindles on 2040-parts.com
Noblesville, Indiana, United States
Skis & Runners for Sale
- 1977 skidoo 340 everest electric parts: one good original ski(US $34.99)
- 05 polaris rmk 900 rails ja(US $64.99)
- 05 polaris rmk 900 left ski spindle hh(US $39.99)
- 05 polaris rmk 900 right ski spindle he(US $39.99)
- 2001 arctic cat zr 600 efi c&a pro ultra ii skis c and a cna(US $249.99)
- Nos polaris skag carbide runner plate(US $74.99)
2013 GMC Terrain Denali priced from $35,350
Tue, 12 Jun 2012The 2013 GMC Terrain Denali five-passenger SUV will have a base price of $35,350, including shipping charges. The 2013 Terrain is the latest GMC offering to get the luxury Denali trim, joining the Acadia Denali, the Sierra Denali pickup and the Yukon Denali. Pricing for the 2013 full model lineup hasn't been made available, but the 2012 Terrain ranges from a base price of $26,385 up to $32,085 for the top SLT-2 trim level.
‘Hydrogen Petrol’. Is this the answer?
Mon, 31 Jan 2011Hydrogen Petrol - the Holy Grail Many accuse us of a Luddite attitude to new technologies aimed at replacing our reliance on oil and the internal combustion engine. But nothing could be further from the truth. We embrace new technology, but only if it brings improvement.
Porsche 911 GT3 R Hybrid at the Nurburgring – Video
Wed, 28 Apr 2010The Porsche 911 GT3 R Hybrid Nurburgring video below In February we reported that Porsche has developed the unthinkable – a hybrid 911. But this wasn’t a hybrid 911 with a bank of batteries and a fluffy-bunny conscience, but a rampant track 911 with a great big electro-magnetic flywheel and a KERS-like thump of an extra 160bhp – the Porsche 911 GT3 R Hybrid. The 911 GT3 R uses technology developed by Williams F1 and comprises of a pair of generators in the front wheels that shove energy to a composite flywheel (conveniently located next to the driver – not sure how well that would go down on a road0going version) which is the stored and can be thrown at the back wheels whenever the driver wants, in a way very similar to KERS.