Deeza Ni-l601 Sway Bar Link Kit-suspension Stabilizer Bar Link on 2040-parts.com
Danbury, Connecticut, US
Sway Bars for Sale
- Moog k80338 sway bar link kit-suspension stabilizer bar link kit(US $54.04)
- Moog k80222 sway bar bushing-suspension stabilizer bar bushing(US $12.41)
- Moog k80880 sway bar link kit-suspension stabilizer bar link kit(US $45.44)
- Moog k750094 sway bar link kit-suspension stabilizer bar link kit(US $30.20)
- Auto 7 840-0007 sway bar bushing-suspension stabilizer bar bushing(US $10.89)
- Moog k200160 sway bar bushing-suspension stabilizer bar bushing kit(US $26.09)
Concept Car of the Week: AMC Amitron (1967)
Fri, 13 Dec 2013While the American auto industry spent most of the late ‘60s creating huge barges powered by monstrous engines with loud decals on disco paint jobs, AMC believed in the future of compact cars, fuel economy, and go-faster stripes. Designed under Richard Teague's supervision, the quirky Amitron was unveiled in 1967 in a hotel in Detroit. Measuring less than 2,200mm long, it is 350mm shorter than a Smart Fortwo and its wide track gave room for three passengers seating abreast.
Mercedes CLS 63 AMG Shooting Brake revealed on video & in photos
Mon, 02 Jul 2012The new Mercedes CLS 63 AMG Shooting Brake has been revealed ahead of a debut at the Paris Motor Show. When we had the reveal of the new Mercedes CLS Shooting Brake last week we bemoaned the fact that all the UK was getting was a pair of diesel-powered CLS’s. But we did point out, despite nothing official from Mercedes, that there was a good chance they were going to take a camouflaged version of the one petrol powered CLS the UK should eventually get – the Mercedes CLS 63 AMG Shooting Brake – to Goodwood at the weekend.
MIT develops self-transforming materials that behave 'like robots without robots'
Wed, 15 Oct 2014A cross-disciplinary research lab at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) has developed a suite of programmable materials, including carbon fiber, printed wood grain, textile composites, rubbers and plastics, that self-transform when exposed to an external stimulus. Director of the Self-Assembly Lab, Skylar Tibbits, presented a TED talk on 4D printing in 2013, where he demonstrated how a flat sheet of material could effectively build itself when exposed to water, like a robot without a robot. Following positive feedback from industries including aviation, automotive and manufacturing, his lab has been working on developing materials that change according to different activation sources, including heat, light, and air pressure, in addition to water – all of which have automotive relevance.