Arias Pistons 12.5:1 Compression 82mm Bore Honda B-series on 2040-parts.com
Orlando, Florida, United States
![]() 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 |
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1970s supercars
Thu, 10 Jul 2008By Tim Pollard and Ben Oliver 10 July 2008 16:02 Supercars in the Seventies Lamborghini continued to define the supercar in the ’70s, building on the success of the dramatic Miura with the brutal and startling silhouette of the Countach. But Lambo’s nemesis Ferrari was never far behind, and the two Italian thoroughbreds dominated the market, with a succession of beautiful supercars throughout the decade. Despite the threat of the global oil crisis, the Germans started to muscle in on supercar territory with the rare BMW M1 and Porsche's upstart sports car, the 911 Turbo.Browse our GBU-style pick of the decade's landmarks below – and vote for your favourite supercar decade in our poll Make and model Year Price Engine 0-60mph Top speed 1973 £14,610 4390cc flat 12, 360bhp, 311lb ft 5.4sec 175mph For Pininfarina's styling set the look for Ferraris until well into the 1980s Against Ferrari's answer to the Miura arrived seven years late Verdict A seminal Ferrari for styling and engineering, too often overlooked Ferrari's first mid-engined V12 was good enough to stay in production for nine years, bridging the huge gap between the Sixties Daytona and the Testarossa of the Eighties Related Articles: Other Ferrari stories Make and model Year Price Engine 0-60mph Top speed Porsche 911 Turbo 1974 £14,749 2994cc flat six, 260bhp, 253lb ft 6.0sec 155mph For The car that took the 911 into supercar territory; a legend was born Against Everything you've heard about the handling of early cars is an understatement.
Vauxhall & Opel could merge with Peugeot Citroen.
Sat, 13 Oct 2012GM Europe (Opel and Vauxhall) could extend their deal with PSA (Peugeot Citroen) with a Joint Venture or merger. When GM Europe and PSA announced they were forming an alliance earlier this year, we asked if this was an admission that the mainstream car market in Europe had changed forever, and an alliance between Opel, Vauxhall, Peugeot and Citroen was the only way to keep the brands viable. But we did also question what use a projected annual saving of €2 billion by sharing suppliers and co-developing platforms would be to PSA and GM considering their woeful losses.
Video: Jaguar's Julian Thomson on the importance of design values
Tue, 30 Oct 2012Jaguar's Head of Advanced Design, Julian Thomson, appeared at this month's PSFK Conference in London giving a talk on design values. Thomson's talk, ‘Concepting Dreams, Making Reality Happen', dealt with questions of creating a design story as well as how Jaguar uses the value of its heritage while keeping things original and new. Thomson – the man behind the 2010 C-X75 and the recently revealed F-Type – said, "You can't get a good design story if you don't look at your heritage, where you came from, where your values came from." He went on to discuss the ‘sad years of Jaguar', from around 1968 to 2004 where Jaguar was too timid to develop and "essentially made the same-looking car." He put this down to a reluctance on Jaguar's part to move too far away from its successful models and, quite interestingly, because "not only did we start doing market research, we started asking Americans what they wanted." Watch the full video on the left.