This is a cassette tape that would of been provided by the dealer to review car features. Side 1 is on vehicle features Side 2 is on optional features Tape is in good used condition |
Camaro for Sale
- 1976 chevrolet nova & camaro owner's manual "free shipping"(US $7.99)
- 93 chevy camaro pontiac firebird a.b.s. supplement shop manual(US $4.99)
- 1995 chevrolet camaro z28 dealer sales brochure(US $2.00)
- 1988 chevy chevrolet camaro service shop repair manual set w mitchell's +(US $39.95)
- 2014 chevrolet camaro navigation owners manual zl1 z/28 ss rs lt ls v8 6.2 7.l(US $119.99)
- 1974 chevrolet camaro (including z28 models) sales brochure / original!!!(US $19.48)
Record breaking Bluebird reunited with nose
Fri, 13 Dec 2013WORLD LAND SPEED RECORD holder Sir Malcolm Campbell’s Bluebird CN7 car has been reunited with its original nose. The car’s original nose was damaged and then kept in Coventry since 1960, but it has now been brought back to the car that lives at the National Motor Museum at Beaulieu, Hampshire. Damaged during a World Land Speed Record attempt on the Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah, USA, the nose of the car was sent back to Coventry for repairs and an updated design to help make the car more stable at very high speeds.
Subaru VIZIV 2 Concept teased for Geneva Motor Show
Fri, 21 Feb 2014First tease for the Subaru VIZIV 2 Concept The Subaru VIZIV 2 Concept teased for a Geneva Motor Show debut is yet another concept from Subaru that points to a new crossover – at some point. Subaru kicked of the VIZIV Concept (VIZIV apparently stands for ‘Vision for Innovation’) path at last year’s Geneva Motor Show with the first VIZVIZ concept which, said Subaru, represented the future design and vision for technical innovation. Subaru aren’t saying anything much about VIZIV 2 ahead of Geneva, but the original VIZIV Concept came with a four-pot 2.0 litre boxer engine helped along by a pair of electric motors powering the back wheels and another electric motor providing power for the front wheels.
Hongik University's transportation design process
Mon, 22 Jun 2009Hongik University in Seoul, Korea, is one of the preeminent design schools in the country with a diverse range of programs. But the school's transportation design department has also developed a unique approach for concept ideation. At the International Transportation Design Forum in Pforzheim, Germany, Professor Joo Hyun Chung from the school's Transportation Design course gave Car Design News an exclusive insight into the process, explaining how students express their ideas into 3D surfaces directly, using materials such as paper and wire for the first exploration of the form rather than the traditional 2D to 3D process.