Centric Parts 410.48000e Front Inner Bearing on 2040-parts.com
Temecula, California, US
Wheel Hubs & Bearings for Sale
- Centric parts 410.65000 rear axle bearing(US $76.50)
- Centric parts 410.66000 front outer bearing(US $30.98)
- Centric parts 410.61001 rear wheel bearing(US $57.26)
- Centric parts 410.66003 rear outer bearing set(US $55.86)
- Centric parts 410.65001e front wheel bearing set(US $46.77)
- Centric parts 410.61003 rear axle bearing(US $58.42)
Hyundai PassoCorto coming to Geneva
Fri, 21 Feb 2014Hot on the tailpipes of the Kia GT4 Stinger's debut in Detroit comes word of an even racier-looking two-seater from parent company Hyundai – the PassoCorto. Built by and for Gen Y car enthusiasts, the PassoCorto was styled by 16 students in the Master's program of transportation design at the Istituto Europeo Design (IED) in Turin. The students were tasked by Hyundai Design Center Europe with making “…the car that would be on top of their list for buying and driving.” We don't know any Gen Ys who could fork over close to $60,000 for a car, the cost of the similarly-sized Alfa 4C, but we know plenty who would like to have one.
2011 Honda Civic at Detroit
Tue, 14 Dec 2010The 2011 Honda Civic - debut at then 2011 Detroit Motor Show Honda are previewing the Honda Civic Concept at next month’s Detroit Motor Show and have releaed a sketch to let us know what to expect. But this isn’t really a concept, it’s the 2011 Honda Civic and it will be on sale in the US by the Spring. Although it’s never particularly sensible to judge a car from a sketch – car companies do like to employ a little artistic license when rendering product yet to be – it seems clear that the 2011 Civic is going to get styling evolved from the Honda CR-Z with a bit of current Civic Type-R aggression thrown in as standard.
The Woodward Dream Cruise with Ian Callum
Wed, 18 Sep 2013Try describing the Woodward Dream Cruise—a pulsing expression of Amer-ican automotive enthusiasm condensed into an endless, eight-lane traffic jam—and your audience will fall into one of two groups: The ones who shrug it off as inexplicable gasoline-fueled hysteria, or the ones who simply embrace it as the day-long automotive flash mob it is. Ian Callum, principal designer for Jaguar, falls firmly in the second camp. That's right.