Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Arias Pistons 12.5:1 Compression 82mm Bore Honda B-series on 2040-parts.com

US $499.99
Location:

Orlando, Florida, United States

Orlando, Florida, United States
Condition:New Brand:Arias Manufacturer Part Number:3330420

Categories
WHY CHOOSE US
Arias Pistons 12.5:1 Compression 82mm bore Honda B-Series
Description

Honda/Acura B18c1 DOHC VTEC 
1.8L 
Stock Bore: 82mm
Stroke: 3.433
Rod: 5.430
Head CC: 41.6
Gasket: .028
Deck: .005
Compression Height: 1.180
Dome CC: 6
Compression Ration with Stock Head: 12.5:1 
Required Ring set: 1012303228



Payment is accepted only through Paypal.

We will only ship to the Paypal confirmed shipping address.

Payment for orders should be made within 5 business days.

Sales tax will be charged for orders from Florida.

If you require another payment arrangement, please contact us by email or eBay seller messages.
You may also like this

Ford Evos concept car (2011) news and pictures

Wed, 31 Aug 2011

Ford launched its new Evos concept as no less than its new global design direction at a pre-Frankfurt show event in Berlin yesterday. Pay attention to the new Evos - it sets a blueprint for life after the Kinetic design language that has shaped Fords for the past few years. All its design big guns were in attendance to reinforce the Evos’s worldwide significance from overall design chief J Mays to his two regional executive design directors, Martin Smith and Moray Callum.

Mercedes SLS David Coulthard Golf Ball catch – now on video

Thu, 21 Jun 2012

The recent golf ball catching Guinness world record set by David Coulthard and Jake Shepherd finally turns up on video. In another of those ‘We didn’t know there was a world record for that’ stories, we reported earlier this month that a new Guinness World Record had been set for the furthest golf shot caught in a car. A Mercedes SLS AMG driven by David Coulthard had managed to catch a golf ball driven down the runway at Dunsfold by professional golfer Jake Shepherd.

Early cars, fashion on display at the Petersen

Thu, 16 Sep 2010

Automotivated, a new exhibit at the Petersen Automotive Museum in Los Angeles, traces the evolution of clothes worn in cars--from the bulky circus-tent stuff people had to wear to keep from freezing to death in the jangly, open-topped conveyances of 100 years ago, up to the height of the European Concours in the 1920s and '30s, when what you and your date wore was just as important to winning best of show as the styling of your Delahaye/Delage/Talbot Lago. “In the earliest days of the automobile, you were sitting on the car, you weren't sitting in it,” said Leslie Kendall, curator at the Petersen. So the first section of the exhibit shows people (mannequins dressed as people) in heavy, practical overcoats, scarves and goggles.