Centerforce 43001 Roller Pilot Bearing 62-06 Chevy Cars & Truck Pilot Bearing, R on 2040-parts.com
NY, United States
Transmission for Sale
- Mcleod 460130 steel sfi 168 tooth fly- wheel- sbc int balance flywheel, 168 toot(US $356.85)
- Brinn transmission bearing 71023(US $57.19)
- Bert transmissions sg-1302 output shaft sg-1300(US $480.67)
- Bert transmissions sg-1076 double row chain 3/8(US $74.40)
- Bert transmissions 3-bs-ok-n ball spline tail housing overhaul kit(US $117.16)
- Bert transmissions sg-1031-k reverse bearing(US $73.18)
Aston Martin Rapide coming home
Tue, 07 Jun 2011Aston Martin Rapide - homeward bound It took Aston Martin what seemed like forever to get their four-door supercar – the Aston Martin Rapide – in to production, and even then they didn’t build it themselves. When they were busy planning production of the Rapide the world’s economy was buoyant, credit was a piece of cake and Aston Martins were flying out of the showroom. But the new economic reality bit in 2008 and sales fell at Aston Martin, but by then the plan to get the Rapide built at Magna Steyr in Austria was unstoppable so, despite Aston Martin workers twiddling their thumbs as Magna Steyr built Rapides, there as nothing to be done.
Hongik University Degree Show 2008
Tue, 10 Feb 2009Hongik University held its tenth annual Degree Show late last year at the university's Modern Gallery in Seoul, Korea. With a focus on creating the next generation of sedans for the graduating students' favorite brands, luxury sedans were developed using various design procedures. The students produced sketches, a 1/10 half-mirror clay model, a 3D model with scanned modeling data in Alias, and created the proposals using a CNC machine.
Aston Martin Cygnet – what’s going on?
Wed, 17 Mar 2010The Aston Martin Cygnet - fresh from Aston's website Aston Martin first rolled the Aston Martin Cygnet in to view back in June last year. It seemed as if they were trying to judge just what flack they would get for considering producing an Aston-ised Toyota Aygo. Would the world throw its hands up in horror, or would they understand the rationale behind the move?