For sale is the owner's manual for a 1984 Honda ATC 200M It's in pretty good condition.
Honda for Sale
- 1984 honda xr 200 owner's manual(US $50.00)
- Lot of 3 vintage 1974 dealer brochure poster motorcycle cb-750 cb-550 others(US $15.00)
- 1987 honda atc 250sx owner's manual(US $50.00)
- 1985 honda atc 350x owner's manual(US $50.00)
- 2003 honda vt1100c2 shadow sabre 1100 motorcycle owners manual -vt 1100 c2-sabre(US $39.99)
- 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 honda cb900f 919 service repair shop factory manual (US $23.88)
Mazda hints at new look
Wed, 15 Nov 2006By Phil McNamara Motor Industry 15 November 2006 10:49 Mazda is working on an all-new, swoopy design language, which will be unveiled on this Nagare concept car in late November. The company has issued this borderline pointless, teaser sketch of the coupe concept. The Nagare show car – to be unveiled in Los Angeles on 29 November – will influence the next wave of Mazdas, such as future sports cars.
Carlos Ghosn's automaker mantra: Go big or you'll go away
Tue, 25 May 2010Size matters in auto company survival, Renault and Nissan CEO Carlos Ghosn told an audience in Detroit on Tuesday. To cope with the escalating costs and scope of a global industry, successful automakers must complete a trifecta--be able to compete in every technology, every market and every segment, Ghosn said during a luncheon speech at the Detroit Economic Club “No 3 million-unit carmaker can make it,” Ghosn said, explaining why his Renault-Nissan alliance forged an alliance with Germany's Daimler AG. Competency in one or two of the three skills is not enough, and only very large companies can afford all three, he said.
Saab gets a ray of hope from China
Sun, 11 Sep 2011Victor Muller sees a glimpse of sunshine from China The saga that is the long and painful demise of Saab seemed to reach its nadir last week when courts in Sweden refused to offer the beleaguered car maker sanctuary in its protection. We thought that would be the end for Saab – despite a never-say-die appeal of the decision by Victor Muller, due to be heard tomorrow – with nowhere left to hide from trade supplier debts of €150 million, and the wrath of Sweden’s unions ready to file for Saab’s bankruptcy over unpaid wages for Saab employees. The nadir for Saab should reasonably be followed by its rapid consignment to the annuls of motoring history, but a tiny glimmer of hope has risen from Saab’s putative investors in China.