Other for Sale
- Dorman 565-023 cylinder head freeze plug(US $22.21)
- Dnj engine components hbk1135 stretch head bolt set(US $42.02)
- Standard motor products ts382 temperature sending switch for gauge(US $66.44)
- Dnj engine components hbk978 stretch head bolt set(US $59.60)
- Dnj engine components p124 piston(US $142.52)
- Standard motor products ts496 temperature sending switch for light(US $25.12)
New Range Rover is Car Dealer’s Car of the Year
Thu, 13 Jun 2013The new Range Rover (pictured) get Car Dealer Magazine’s Car of the Year Award The new Range Rover may have started its trophy cabinet with an award for the best 4×4 from the Sunday Times – even though they’d never driven it – but the Car of the Year Award from Car Dealer Magazine is a much more credible one. It’s more credible because it’s voted on by car dealers across the UK – from a wide range of franchises – and gives credibility not just to the new Range Rover but to Land Rover’s support of dealers too. Car Dealer Magazine say the new Range Rover was the clear winner by a mile, with dealers commenting the latest version of the Range Rover is a gargantuan step on from the old model – which itself was already very good – and that it ‘Cannot fail to impress’.
Hummer bought by Sichuan Tengzhong
Wed, 03 Jun 2009Hummer is to be bought by Chinese Company Sichuan Tengzhong Heavy Industrial Machinery. We’ve got used to quite a number of Chinese car companies lately. BYD have been in the news with their MOU with VW, and BYD has also hit the headlines with its new car battery technology for EVs and of course its 2.0 litre clone Porsche Cayenne.
The anti-drink-drive car
Fri, 03 Aug 2007By Tim Pollard Motor Industry 03 August 2007 02:25 Nissan today unveiled its answer to drink-driving: the car that monitors the driver's alcohol level before every journey and stops you if you're about to break the law. Boffins at the Japanese firm have equipped a domestic market Fuga with monitoring equipment that can spot if a driver has been boozing. It's so sophisticated, engineers claim it can differentiate between perfume (which often contains alcohol) and tell if it's the driver or the passengers that have been drinking.