Biker Patches Harley Davidson Vintage Leather Jacket Patches Ace Of Spades 1% on 2040-parts.com
Mansfield, Ohio, US
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Patches for Sale
- Harley davidson harley girl studded patch 7 3/4 inch patch(US $9.99)
- Embroidered biker motorcycle back jacket patch - for harley davidson fans(US $24.00)
- * cleveland motorcycle back patch w/ wings, 15" wide, pristine condition(US $20.00)
- * set of 3 indian patches - 10", 6", 2.5" never used, excellent quality(US $35.00)
- * indian motorcycle felt sew-on patch of logo, 13"(US $25.00)
- * ace four motorcycle back patch, 17" w/ eagle "fastest motorcycle in the world"(US $25.00)
625 cars per day found to be insurance write-offs
Wed, 18 Sep 2013ONE IN EVERY 33 vehicles given a history check is found to be an insurance write-off, according to data gathered by HPI. In 2012 one in 33 vehicles checked by HPI was an insurance total loss – otherwise known as a write-off. This equates to 625 cars a day or over 223,000 cars per year being dangerously repaired and sold on to unsuspecting consumers.
Toyota FT-86 to get Subaru 2.0 litre Boxer engine
Fri, 29 Apr 2011The Scion FR-S Concept - the North American Toyota FT-86 It’s actually starting to look as if Toyota – and Subaru, for that matter – are really going to finally get their respective fingers out and deliver to the market the affordable sports cat they’ve been promising for the last two year. The original Toyota FT-86 surfaced in 2009 with a promise of affordability and fun and we all got quite excited, especially as it was a surprisingly brave move for an increasingly bland and corporate Toyota. But then everything went rather quiet.
Google Car (self) drives into the future [w/video]
Wed, 28 May 2014After years of speculation, Google finally announced its Google Car autonomous vehicle at the Recode Code Conference in Palos Verdes, CA yesterday. Google CEO Sergey Brin unveiled the company's new two-seat, driverless vehicle at the software conference, underlining the company's aim of drastically reducing road deaths and injuries caused by human error, particularly by distracted drivers. "We're now exploring what fully self-driving vehicles would look like by building some prototypes; they'll be designed to operate safely and autonomously without requiring human intervention," said Brin.