2004-2012 Ford F-150 6.5' Styleside Bed Hidden Snap Tonneau Cover on 2040-parts.com
Ontario, California, US
Truck Bed Accessories for Sale
- Chevy colorado gmc canyon 04-12 tailgate protector gm # 12498392(US $65.45)
- 1997-2003 ford f-150 6.5' bed flareside bed lock & roll up tonneau cover(US $119.98)
- Lund 95037 genesis tri-fold latching tonneau cover(US $0.99)
- 2009 2010 2011 nissan titan bed tube rail crew long chrome oem(US $346.88)
- Egr bed rail caps covers chevrolet silverdao 2008 1500 crew cab short bed(US $30.00)
- New access 97-03 ford 41219 f150 8' truck bed & 04 heritage lorado rollup cover(US $566.00)
The new Honda Insight hybrid is shown at the Detroit auto show
Sun, 11 Jan 2009The new Honda Insight was unveiled at the Detroit Auto Show To hear Honda tell it, the new 2010 Insight coming to market this April is all about making hybrid technology available to Gen-Y. That's because it's smaller and less expensive than the class-leading Toyota Prius or Honda's own Civic Hybrid. We drove the Insight in Arizona recently and found it also more fun to drive than most hybrids, another attribute that ranks high among young buyers.
Maybach Zeppelin comes over the horizon
Thu, 12 Feb 2009The Maybach Zeppelin - an even bigger waste of money than the standard Maybach Maybach has not exactly been an unmitigated success for Mercedes. Conceived as a competitor for Rolls Royce, it does seem to have carved itself a niche, but probably not the one that Mercedes wanted. Perceived by most as a tarted-up S Class, and bought by the wealthy of the Playstation generation, rather than the Captains of Industry that Mercedes envisioned, the Maybach must be a loss-maker for Mercedes.
2000s supercars
Tue, 15 Jul 2008By Tim Pollard and Ben Oliver 15 July 2008 12:41 Supercars in the Noughties They say power can corrupt, but the horsepower race raged well into the current decade. Ferrari built the Enzo, Porsche the Carrera GT and then came the car that trumped them all: the Bugatti Veyron. The definitive hypercar once again moved the goalposts – although this time, we suspect they’ll remain moved forever.