HAVE FOR SALE A OLDER FINAL ROUND 2 STAGE CONTROLLER, IT STILL WORKS GREAT AND THINK IT WOULD BE A GREAT ADDITION TO ANY BUDGET RACERS PROGRAM,COMMENTS PLEASE FEEL FREETO CONTACT, THANKS
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Dragsters for Sale
- Rjs racing sfi 16.1 latch & link pull up harness belt v mount any color(US $74.99)
- Rjs racing sfi 16.1 5pt latch & link pull up lap belt harness any color(US $79.99)
- Dragster bbc headers dynatech dynomax(US $450.00)
- Sprintex superchargers racing decals stickers diesel hotrod nhra offroad drags(US $7.99)
- Dragster outer steering shaft mount ,p&s, strange
- Bbc 468 race motor(US $2,000.00)
Hamilton tops the time sheets as F1 season kicks off
Fri, 14 Mar 2014LEWIS HAMILTON recovered from the misery of completing just half a lap on his opening run to move to the top of the timesheets on the first official day of the new Formula One season. Less than five minutes into the year's first practice session at Melbourne's Albert Park, and on his maiden installation lap, Hamilton's Mercedes ground to a halt due to a sensor calibration problem that cut out the power unit. That was it for Hamilton until the start of second free practice, when he more than made up for lost time and underlined his status as championship favourite in the wake of Mercedes' impressive form in pre-season testing.
What’s a Range Rover ‘Vouge’?
Fri, 12 Apr 2013Now the 2013 Range Rover is out in the wild, they’re becoming a common site on our roads and in car parks. So when one of the Cars UK team was sat waiting patiently in the Waitrose car park for his beloved to finish replenishing stocks, he wasn’t particularly surprised to find a nice new Range Rover Vogue slowly pass-by looking for a parking space. It looked a completely standard Vogue – the entry-level Range Rover – with no personalisation of any sort.
Newsflash: Magna 'agrees to buy GM Europe': latest news
Fri, 29 May 2009Latest news: what Magna's deal means for GM Europe By Tim Pollard Motor Industry 29 May 2009 19:31 Canadian parts giant Magna this afternoon struck an agreement in principle to buy stricken GM's European arm, Opel and Vauxhall. The agreement has not yet been confirmed publicly and is still in the early phase, but brings to an end an uncomfortable round of talks in the past 48 hours which saw a spat between American negotiators and European politicians, and Fiat CEO Sergio Marchionne walking away from the table.Once sealed, the deal must first be approved by the German government, which is to provide interim funding to the new owners. However, Italian car maker Fiat isn't yet totally ruled out of the running, as Magna's chief exec earlier today intimated that he could be interested in cooperation.CAR Online will update with the latest developments as they happen.