Brass Cup Expansion Plug 1-3/8 In., Height 0.310 - Dorman# 565-025.1 on 2040-parts.com
Warsaw, Kentucky, United States
Cylinder Heads & Parts for Sale
- Pipe plug c.s. square 1/2-14 npt, head size 3/8 in. - dorman# 090-092(US $11.74)
- Steel cup expansion plug 5/8 in., height 0.220 - dorman# 555-108(US $12.06)
- Concave steel cup expansion plug 1-1/2 in., height 1.495 in. - dorman# 550-022(US $12.22)
- Rubber expansion plug 1-1/2" - size range 1-1/2" - 1-5/8" - dorman# 570-009.1(US $12.14)
- Brass cup expansion plug 1-1/2 in., height 0.420 - dorman# 565-028.1(US $10.77)
- Competition cams 4975 economy head cc kit; cylinder head tool(US $49.55)
Nissan Driver Assist – be Michael Schumacher
Sun, 26 Jul 2009Nissan have developed 'Driver Assist' to make crashes a things of the past Driver Assist uses GPS to track the car’s progress, and set it up in advance on twists and turns in the road. The system uses integral sensors to check how the driver is setting the car up for the corner and adjusts the settings if the driver is not getting it right. It can correct over or under steer by applying braking to any of the wheels individually and even adjust the torque to make sure the car goes where the driver intends.
One Lap of the Web: Cool cufflinks in your Crown Coupe
Wed, 19 Feb 2014-- Want to be the coolest person at your next event "celebrating lifestyle and automotive achievement that will embody the realization of automotive aspiration"? (Note: this was part of a real invitation we received.) You can do no better than buying these cufflinks made from a Cosworth-powered Jaguar F1 car. The bolts were "used to retain the crank within the engine block," says Ledon Gifts in their Etsy store.
1960s supercars
Thu, 10 Jul 2008By Tim Pollard and Ben Oliver 10 July 2008 16:00 Supercars in the Sixties The swinging ’60s spawned many joyous things – and its spirit of liberalisation applied equally to the motor car. So we shouldn’t be surprised that it was the fun-filled decade that begat the supercar. The Lamborghini Miura was arguably first – and CAR’s own wizard of words, LJK Setright, penned the phrase that defined the breed: he called it the supercar.