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Airaid Throttle Body Spacer Billet Aluminum Red Anodized 1" Ford 7.3l Diesel Ea on 2040-parts.com

US $99.90
Location:

Tallmadge, Ohio, US

Tallmadge, Ohio, US
Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Refund will be given as:Money Back Item must be returned within:60 Days Return policy details:Items may be returned within 90-days or purchase for a refund or exchange, if in new and unused condition. Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Restocking Fee:No Brand:Airaid Manufacturer Part Number:400-595 Other Part Number:AID-400-595 Warranty:Yes UPC:642046405953

Lamborghini ‘Super Sports Car’ teased for Frankfurt

Tue, 02 Aug 2011

Lamborghini 'Super Sports Car' tease for Frankfurt 2011 (click photo for full image) Lamborghini has a long-standing promise to bring something new to every major motor show, and with Frankfurt only weeks away they are starting to tease a ‘Lamborghini Super Sports Car‘. So far all we’ve got is the image above (click it to see the whole thing) which just says “Discover a new Lamborghini super sports car at the next Frankfurt Motorshow.” So what is this new Lamborghini super sports car? Well, we doubt it will be a Lamborghini SUV Concept as we doubt even Lamborghini would consider such a vehicle a super sports car.

Renault Frendzy concept (2011) first official pictures

Thu, 07 Jul 2011

Renault has revealed its new 66bhp electric city vehicle – the Frendzy – and in true concept car style it features non-symmetrical doors (think Mini Clubman) and a TV screen instead of a rear window on the other side (think Pimp My Ride…). This is the 'Work' instalment of new styling chief Laurens van den Acker's series of concept cars showing the different sides of Renault design. It's also a hint of the new Kangoo. Not a great start then.

The no-show cars: a reader rant on mad concepts

Wed, 14 Apr 2010

Instigated by Harley Earl at General Motors in the late 30s with the quaintly named Buick Y-Job, show cars, or concept cars, were presented to an excited public eager for new things. As the world recovered from a depression and then a war, these vehicles pointed to a better future that many people believed in, including the people who produced them. And, although many of the concept cars of the 50s, with their Jetsons plexiglass roofs and notional nuclear powered engines seem ludicrous now, in their time they weren’t that cynical.