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

BMW will build electric cars in Leipzig

Mon, 22 Feb 2010

BMW AG will produce its electric-car range at its plant in Leipzig, Germany, the automaker said on Monday. In addition, BMW factories in Wackersdorf and Landshut, Germany, will produce parts for the so-called Megacity Vehicle. “The BMW Group will build the car of the future in Leipzig with high-tech innovations from Bavaria,” BMW CEO Norbert Reithofer said in a statement.

Weineck Cobra 780 at RM Auctions in Paris

Wed, 08 Jan 2014

The phrase “fastest Cobra ever made” has been thrown around too often for our taste over the last…50 or so years. But we're going to say it now, possibly for the last time: How does 1,100 hp sound? Weineck, a Germany-based tuning company, dropped a 12.9-liter -- 780-cubic-inch -- V8 in the famous body, for a run of 15 cars, all of which sold out.

McLaren P1 (2013) CAR's race-speed Goodwood ride

Tue, 05 Nov 2013

The McLaren P1 leaves the startline like a shard of shrapnel riding the percussion wave of an explosion. It needs high-definition slow-mo to describe it, like those films of a bullet shattering an apple, or the slow-motion shots of an F1 car skipping over a kerb, front wing flexing, tyres deflecting, all that physics captured in beautiful, drowsy detail. In my mind, when I re-live the first moments of my ride up the Goodwood hillclimb in McLaren’s new hypercar, I see the release of energy in the same 1500-frames-per-second style.