Centric 120.63054 Rear Brake Rotor/disc-premium Rotor-preferred on 2040-parts.com
Chino, California, US
Discs, Rotors & Hardware for Sale
- Centric 120.65080 front brake rotor/disc-premium rotor-preferred(US $116.23)
- Centric 120.65083 front brake rotor/disc-premium rotor-preferred(US $103.23)
- Centric 120.44083 front brake rotor/disc-premium rotor-preferred(US $72.75)
- Centric 120.44121 front brake rotor/disc-premium rotor-preferred(US $56.68)
- Centric 120.50016 rear brake rotor/disc-premium rotor-preferred(US $47.83)
- Centric 120.61082 front brake rotor/disc-premium rotor-preferred(US $60.93)
New Mercedes A45 AMG has 105 years of 4WD on its side
Wed, 15 Aug 2012With the new Mercedes A45 AMG on the horizon – complete with 4WD – Mercedes chart the history of all wheel drive on their vehicles. We tend to think of 4WD road cars as a modern innovation, and certainly very few 4WD road cars hit the road in a mainstream way much before the 1980s (the Jensen FF was hardly mainstream before someone points out that was in the 1960s). But the history of 4WD goes back, certainly in the case of Mercedes, a surprising 105 years when Daimler built the Dernburg-Wagen, a 4WD vehicle that not only got all-wheel drive but all wheel steering too.
The 500-hp club: The room is getting crowded
Mon, 02 Apr 2012At a time when fuel economy counts for just about everything, there's still a horsepower war raging in the United States. The number of fire-breathing wedge-shaped supercars and hot sedans and coupes that can pump out 500 hp or better has nearly doubled in the past five years to more than 70. A decade ago there were just two members of the 500 hp club in the United States: the Ferrari 575M and Lamborghini Murcielago.
Jaguar F-TYPE Project 7 dynamic debut at Le Mans Classic this weekend
Thu, 03 Jul 2014The Jaguar F-Type Project 7 joins the first D-Type at Le Mans this weekend The Jaguar F-Type Project 7 got its reveal at the Goodwood Festival of Speed last weekend as a D-Type inspired, short-run F-Type with 567 bhp and 502lb/ft of torque. It was joined by Land Rover’s first Special Operations car – albeit a prototype version with red and black swirly camouflage – the Range Rover Sport SVR, which gleefully took to the hillclimb to demonstrate the incongruity of a big SUV acting like a hot hatch and sounding like a muscle car on steroids. But what was a little odd is that the RRS SVR happily strutted its stuff, even though it’s only a prototype, but the F-Type Project 7 didn’t turn a wheel in anger.