Brake Pads & Rotors Metallic Front & Rear Kit For 04 Dodge Durango on 2040-parts.com
Gardner, Kansas, US
Discs, Rotors & Hardware for Sale
- Audi a4 3.0 2002-2006 - rear - slotted drilled rotor set (2)(US $106.04)
- Mitsubishi oem 4615a069 disc brake rotor/rear brake rotor/disc(US $76.41)
- Ford oem 5c3z-1125-ca front brake rotor/disc/disc brake rotor(US $127.47)
- Ford oem 9l3z-2c026-a rear brake rotor/disc/disc brake rotor(US $126.00)
- New pair of duralast 55036 front brake rotor/disc-disc brake rotor(US $25.00)
- Oem ford rotor f4tz-1102-aa bronco f150 95-96 54057 prt5487 66677r 1abfs00605(US $32.15)
Rolls Royce Wraith Tease continues
Tue, 12 Feb 2013The Rolls Royce Wraith – coupe sibling to the RR Ghost – continues its tease reveal ahead of a debut at the 2013 Geneva Motor Show. A few days after the news that the new Ghost Coupe would be the Wraith, Rolls Royce started to tease their new sporty coupe with a teaser photo showing the profile of the Wraith – suitably shadowy, of course – and illustrating that this new Rolls Royce will be the most sporty RR we’ve ever seen. When we got the last tease photo of the Wraith in from Rolls Royce, we did warn you to expect an ongoing drip feed of teases and photos before the Wraith arrived at next month’s Geneva Motor Show, so you won’t be surprised to discover we have a new tease in our inbox this morning.
SAIC Roewe
Mon, 16 Oct 2006By Ben Whitworth Motor Industry 16 October 2006 09:40 Rover lives on! This is Shanghai Automotive Industry Corporation’s Roewe 750E - the Rover 75-based saloon - caught here undisguised weeks ahead of its official unveiling at next month’s Beijing motor show. Under a shroud of secrecy the Roewe underwent an official naming ceremony last Friday in Shanghai.
Phones topple tailgating as most hated driving habit
Thu, 10 Apr 2014THERE’S a new ‘hate’ at the top of drivers’ lists, after a study from Kwik Fit showed that using a phone at the wheel has overtaken the long-standing bad habit of tailgating. Talking or texting while driving is hated by 47% of drivers, according to the research; comfortably ahead of tailgating on 42%. It’s the first time that following too closely has been knocked off its seriously irritating perch in years.