91 Honda Cb250 Nighthawk - Compete Wiring Harness - Great Shape!!! on 2040-parts.com
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, US
Bike had only 3,623 miles.
From my 91 night hawk 250.
Compete great shape wiring harness.
Shipping for lower 48. International, Alaska, or Hawaii bidders to pay addition shipping charges.
Electrical Components for Sale
Stator - 1995 suzuki rm125 / rm 125(US $70.00)
Kill switch - 1995 suzuki rm125 / rm 125(US $12.50)
V-twin flat black custom coil cover with key switch hole(US $30.00)
2007 triumph bonneville america 865cc ecu cdi ecm computer igniter carburetor(US $279.99)
Dyna dual output 3.0 ohm coils (1) dc1-2, dydc1-2-single(US $25.00)
Vtx1800 vtx 1800 voltage regulator rectifier 02 honda sh579c-12(US $79.00)
Half of all drivers experience road rage
Wed, 09 Jul 2014MORE THAN half of the drivers in the UK say they have been the victim of road rage at some point in the past 12 months. The same research showed that 11% of drivers in the UK have used full beam in an effort to annoy another driver, while 4% said they had threatened to damage another person’s vehicle. The study by the Van Discount Company showed that women over the age of 50 were the most common target for road rage, with 40% of women in this age bracket saying they experienced road rage at least once a month.
Beijing motor show 2014: CAR's A-Z guide
Fri, 04 Apr 2014By the CAR online team Motor Shows 04 April 2014 10:00 China has become a critical market for carmakers to tap into, with huge sales potential and a thirst for European brands. Click the links below for CAR's stories of all of the new cars featured at the 2014 Beijing motor show. DS 5LS R: sports saloon concept geared at Chinese petrolheads New Juke-sized compact crossover, based on i20 Boxster GTS: faster, better-specced Boxster with 918 Spyder styling cues Cayman GTS: look out 911: hotter Cayman could be the best Porsche ever
Philip Hammond is Secretary of State for Transport
Thu, 13 May 2010Philip Hammond - Secretary of State for Transport The Tories claimed in their election campaigning that motorists have had a raw deal under Labour. Do you know, we’d not noticed. We’d not noticed the inexorable rise in fuel duty even when the country was crying in pain; hadn’t seen the proliferation of speed cameras as revenue gathering tools; not noticed Ken’s cynical manipulation of London’s traffic prior to introducing congestion charging; failed to see that under Labour coppers had disappeared from our roads to be replaced by brainless machines.