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

British Honda engineers get green light from Japan

Fri, 15 Nov 2013

Honda UK’s small UK vehicle engineering centre is all set to grow in size and importance following approval from Japanese bosses. The British car development base supports Honda’s main European development centre in Frankfurt but has been taking on increasing responsibility in recent years. Honda Civic Tourer prototype review (2013 onwards) Honda Civic review (2012 onwards) Success here, said a Honda spokesman, has meant Japanese management feels it can hand over more responsibility to the small Swindon centre.

Go coast to coast in Need for Speed: The Run

Wed, 03 Aug 2011

The Cannonball Run, the Gumball 3000, Paris to Dakar--these are the journeys most of us will never get to make, until now. The Need for Speed video-game series returns on Nov. 15 with NFS: The Run.

P1 reborn: the return of the P1 supercar club

Fri, 23 Oct 2009

There's been a whopping great global recession, in case you hadn't noticed. P1, which was Britain's original supercar club, was struggling to repay asset finance repayments of £100,000 a month to fund its fleet of droolworthy cars – and nobody would buy supercars when P1 tried to sell. The market for top-end cars had frozen at the exact time that P1 most desperately needed the dosh.Eventually the banks called the loans in, as they had identified the supercar market as wobbly business they didn't want during a banking crisis.