Other for Sale
Mopar performance 5249151 torsion bars chrysler a-body stock ride height set(US $319.97)
Flaming river steering coupler fr1943(US $42.92)
Prime choice new axle pivot bushing(US $17.21)
Prime choice front lower control arm bushing/kit(US $7.28)
Ds899---moog --cadillac-buick-olds--gm--center drag link(US $69.95)
Prime choice new steering idler arm(US $27.10)
Renault buys Caterham stake in Alpine as Anglo-French deal collapses
Tue, 10 Jun 2014By Michael Karkafiris Motor Industry 10 June 2014 10:36 The collaboration between Renault and Caterham officially ended today, with the French company acquiring Caterham’s remaining stake in Alpine. It marks the end of the road for the Anglo-French collaboration, leaving Renault the sole owner in Société des Automobiles Alpine. Today’s announcement terminates the 50-50 partnership signed in November 2012 between the two companies, a partnership that started with the promise of building two sister sports cars, one from Alpine and one from Caterham.
One lap of the Web: microcars and muscle cars
Wed, 04 Dec 2013-- Remember the 1986 Pontiac Grand Prix 2+2? Yes, the one that you can't find anywhere now outside of those amazingly outdated posters (where do they find them?) they have on the walls of your local oil change place, right next to a poster of a GMC Syclone and a first-generation Dodge Viper? The one with the plastic nosecone that inevitably gets warped?
Laurence Fishburne reprises Morpheus role for Kia Super Bowl ad
Tue, 28 Jan 2014When we drove the Kia K900 recently, we asked, “Do buyers in the BMW 5-series/Mercedes E-class/Audi A6/Lexus GS class want a prestigious nameplate as much as they want radar adaptive cruise control?” In Kia's new Super Bowl spot starring Laurence Fishburne, Morpheus says yes. The Korean automaker's snatched up the erstwhile voice of Cadillac to reprise his beloved character from the "Matrix" trilogy in the hope of suggesting that reality is mutable, luxury isn't about nameplates, and the K900 will open your eyes to a world of improbable possibilities. Despite the explosions, melting dinner utensils and airborne automobiles of the ad, we actually preferred the making-of video released at the same time as the Super Bowl clip, which you can watch below.