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Adjustable Steering Stabilizer Damper For Yamaha Yzf 600 R1 Fzr Fz6s Fz6 R6 New on 2040-parts.com

US $40.95
Location:

Guangzhou, CN

Guangzhou, CN
Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Refund will be given as:Money Back Item must be returned within:60 Days Return policy details:1.Any Question,please mail us to first. 2..We accept return ,buyer is responsible for the return or resend shipping fees. Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Restocking Fee:No

Preview: Goodwood Festival of Speed 2009 – True Grit

Fri, 20 Mar 2009

By Ben Whitworth Motor Shows 20 March 2009 16:11 The 2009 Festival of Speed – held this year over the weekend of 3-5 July – will honour motorsport’s endurance heroes with a celebration of Le Mans’ 60th anniversary. ‘The Festival will pay tribute to the men who fought against the odds on the track and won,’ Lord March told CAR Online. ‘With drivers like Jochen Mass, Jacky Ickx, Jackie Stewart and Sterling Moss joining us – drivers that went the extra mile in the pursuit of victory – I’m really looking forward to seeing some of the great endurance drivers, riders and machines in action.’ The Festival will also take in a number of other important anniversaries – both Audi and Morgan will be celebrating their centenaries, the Mini will turn 50, and it will mark 40 years of Frank Williams’ involvement in Formula 1.

The Guardian calls Cars UK “The Petrolheads’ favourite web site”

Tue, 01 Jun 2010

Transport Secretary Philip Hammond has common-sense views on speed cameras, cyclists (although perhaps not Boris), speed limits and traffic calming. Which the Guardian doesn't like one bit Being proclaimed the Petrolheads’ favourite website by the Guardian – not a newspaper renowned for its love of cars – we’ll take as a compliment. Although it was meant to be disparaging.

The world’s roads cover an area the size of India

Thu, 26 Apr 2012

The world's roads cover an area the size of India Canadian scientist Felix Pharand has mapped the world’s roads, flights and railways showing the man-made changes on earth – The Anthropocene. If you look at a photo of earth from space it’s easy to think that what you see is how it’s always been. But the planet has changed more in the last 100 years – thanks to man – than ever before.