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

Britain to be third global production site for the Nissan Leaf EV after Japan, U.S.

Thu, 18 Mar 2010

Nissan Motor Co. said it will build the new Leaf electric vehicle at Britain's Sunderland assembly plant starting in early 2013, with initial capacity of 50,000 units. The Japanese company and its French alliance partner Renault will invest more than $642.6 million in the project, including the construction of a lithium ion battery plant on the site.

Toyota aims for a comeback, shuffles execs

Wed, 09 Mar 2011

Toyota, unveiling a new business plan to double operating profit by 2015, will remove its head of North America from a downsized board and promote Canada chief Ray Tanguay to be its highest non-Japanese executive. Yoshi Inaba, 65, continues to lead Toyota North America and Toyota Motor Sales U.S.A. while becoming one of 18 directors to lose board seats.

Production of U.S.-spec Lotus Exige and Elise to end in August

Thu, 09 Jun 2011

The end is near for production of U.S.-specification versions of the Lotus Elise and Exige sports cars. Lotus said on Thursday that it will pull the models from the United States because the airbags no longer meet safety standards. Rules require cars to have smart airbags, which adjust deployment for the speed of impact.