Addco 193 Sway Bar Front Steel Black Powdercoated 7/8" Diameter Saab 900 Kit on 2040-parts.com
Tallmadge, Ohio, US
Sway Bars for Sale
- Addco 513 sway bar black steel front 1 1/8" diameter toyota cressida kit(US $213.75)
- Beck/arnley 101-6997 suspension stabilizer bar link(US $19.99)
- Addco 405 sway bar black steel rear 3/4" diameter saab 900 kit(US $192.41)
- Aftermarket front sway bar link(US $12.89)
- Whiteline adjustable endlinks klc 139(US $80.00)
- Bmw e60 (2004-2010) sway bar end link front right (passenger side) oem(US $49.95)
National Corvette Museum launches effort to build a track complex
Wed, 28 Apr 2010Driving to the National Corvette Museum in Bowling Green, Ky., ranks high on the must-do list of many car enthusiasts. Driving away from the museum in a shiny new Corvette is a dream realized by several hundred people each year, part of Chevrolet's factory-delivery program. Now, the museum wants to make it possible to drive while you're there.
GM reportedly set to sign deal on Thursday to sell Opel
Tue, 13 Oct 2009General Motors Co. likely will sign a deal on Thursday to sell a majority stake in Opel to a group led by Magna International Inc., German news agencies reported, citing sources close to the negotiations. GM agreed on September 10 to sell 55 percent of Opel to Canadian supplier Magna and its Russian partner Sberbank, but the deal stumbled amid labor union demands for a veto on factory closures and concern in the UK and Spain that 4.5 billion euros ($6.7 billion) in aid pledged by the German government for restructuring Opel favored the carmaker's German factories.
McLaren plan to make windscreen wipers obsolete
Sun, 15 Dec 2013McLaren plan to make windscreen wipers obsolete Much of the ‘clunkiness’ in cars – stuff like wind-up windows and a cranking handle – have been made obsolete in cars as technology arrived to make things work better, but one thing that remains on modern cars from the dawn of the motoring age is the windscreen wiper. Invented by Mary Anderson in 1903 after she realised drivers of the first motor cars were having to lean out of the window in rainy conditions to see where they were going, it became a standard fitting on all cars within a few years. Windscreen wipers have certainly improved over the years as technology has developed, but they’re still basically a strip of rubber moving across the windscreen to clear rain.