Bolt Lock 7019341 Receiver Lock on 2040-parts.com
Multiple Warehouses, United States
Towing Systems for Sale
- Stowmaster 5000 tow bar(US $175.00)
- Roadmaster brakepro
- Superglide capture plate 331707 for mor/ryde(US $65.00)
- Superglide capture plate 331751(US $65.00)
- Hidden hitch 87430 class iii/iv; receiver trailer hitch(US $138.52)
- Weatherhead-501 hose brake nsn 4720-00-841=7675 dot-gy 1/8 hl(US $9.99)
VW Up! to launch at Frankfurt 2011
Sun, 07 Nov 2010The VW Up to Launch Frankfurt 2011 It seems like an awfully long time since Volkswagen announced to the world that it was going to make a small range of city cars to cope with modern eco-sensibilities and recession-motivated downsizing. In fact as long ago as April 2009 we reported that VW were to make the Up! in Bratislava with a range of super-eco three-pot engines.
Frankfurt 2011:Rimac Concept One – an Electric Supercar
Sun, 18 Sep 2011Rimac One Concept - an electric hypercar at Frankfurt Our antipathy towards electric cars – and the seeming futility of pursuing a technology that has made little progress in a century – is well known. But we do see electric cars as a fun toy for the better-off, and 23 year-old Croatian Mate Rimac has impressed Frankfurt with his Rimac Concept One electric supercar, which is perhaps the ultimate electric toy for the better-off. Perhaps, in the case of the Rimac One, we should consider it a toy for the seriously well-off, rather than just the better-off, as it’s expected to cost a quite substantial £650k for each of the 88 cars Mate intends making.
Toyota Prius points the way to design future
Mon, 18 May 2009For a glimpse of Toyota's future design trends, check out the Prius. The third generation, debuting Monday in Japan, stays true to the line's role as a vanguard of futuristic styling and sports many new elements that will be popping up soon in other models. Chief among these are the sharply creased corners, the forward placement of the Toyota badge, a lowered grille and styling that Toyota's global design chief Wahei Hirai calls "free-form geometrics." The goal was to create an avant-garde, high-tech look that also screams green.