1982 Honda Cb450sc Nighthawk H908-8. Battery Bracket Tray Mount on 2040-parts.com
Appleton, Wisconsin, United States
Antique, Vintage, Historic for Sale
- 1982 honda cb450sc nighthawk h908-8. black plastic tool storage tray bracket
- 1982 honda cb450sc nighthawk h908-8. carburetors carbs
- 1982 honda cb450sc nighthawk h908-8. chrome metal chain guard
- 1982 honda cb450sc nighthawk h908-8. clutch lever left hand controls switches
- Stock frame 1974 vintage honda qa50 408rr(US $24.99)
- 1982 honda cb450sc nighthawk h908-8. exhaust headers and center collector
Koenigsegg planning an entry-level car – but it’ll still cost £500k
Sat, 26 Apr 2014Koenigsegg are planning an entry-level car at half the price of the Agera R (pictured) Think of the cars that Christian von Koenigsegg has made since he started with the CC8S in 2002 and you think of them as extremes of the supercar genre; the Swedish engineering take on the bloated and massively complex Bugatti Veyron. Christian’s men in a shed in Sweden have gone on to make a series of progressively quicker and more impressive supercars, through the CCR, CCX and the Agera and on to the current most extreme iteration – the Koenigsegg One:1. But it looks like Christian has decided that his ambition to create the world’s greatest hypercar leaves room for a ‘Lesser’ Koenigsegg, a car that still has innovative engineering and extreme performance but comes at a lower price.
Nissan Qashqai+2 (2008): first official pictures
Mon, 07 Apr 2008By Tim Pollard First Official Pictures 07 April 2008 08:54 We’ve heard of 2+2s before, but Nissan is taking this numbers game to a whole new level with the Qashqai+2. As its name suggests, this is a slightly bigger version of the crossover with seven seats, up from the regular car’s five.CAR Online scooped the super-sized Qashqai last year, so it comes as no surprise. Nissan has stretched the wheelbase by 135mm to free up the extra space for a third row of seats, which fold flat when not needed.
McLaren F1 – the California Burn-Up!
Tue, 02 Jun 2009Brings a tear to the eye - a burnt-out McLaren F1 The McLaren F1 is certainly a car designed to burn up the road. But for one poor owner that became a literal nightmare as his £1.75 million McLaren F1 burnt out on a drive to the airport in Rincon Valley, California. McLaren owner Irv Kessler hadn’t used the F1 for 6 months, but he probably wishes he hadn’t yesterday either.