Other for Sale
Dorman oil cooler line(US $25.84)
Standard/t-series ts24t temperature sending switch for gauge(US $11.98)
Arp 100-7712 wheel stud kit honda 12mm x 1.5mm .485" x .275" knurl, 2.85" uhl(US $21.28)
Arp 100-7712 wheel stud kit honda 12mm x 1.5mm .485" x .275" knurl, 2.85" uhl(US $21.28)
Bmw s14 e30 m3 factory oil lines from engine to oil cooler. used, great shape(US $50.00)
Mitsubishi 3000gt stealth ignition coils oem(US $79.99)
McLaren celebrates 20th anniversary of the legendary McLaren F1
Wed, 26 May 2010McLaren Automotive celebrated the 20th anniversary of the start of the F1 program by inviting F1 owners past and present to a celebration dinner at the McLaren Technology Centre in Woking, England. The owners were treated to a display of 21 McLaren F1 road and race cars, the largest number of F1 cars ever assembled in one place. It all started in 1988, when McLaren made the decision to expand from Formula One and design and build what it called "the finest sports car the world had ever seen." In March 1990, the team created to build that car came together for the first time.
Bentley Continental GT3-R with 572 bhp V8 revealed
Tue, 17 Jun 2014The Bentley Continental GT3-R arrives with a 572 bhp V8 As we reported last week, it looks like Bentley has decided to do a V8 take on the original Continental Supersports with the arrival of the Bentley Continental GT3-R, a lighter, more powerful Continental V8. Just like the original Continental Supersports, the Continental GT3-R loses its back seats and goes on a diet (down 100 kg on the V8S) and gets a retuned version of the 4.0 litre twin-turbo V8 producing 572 bhp and 516 lb/ft of torque together with shorter gearing to deliver a 0-60 mph in just 3.6 seconds (0-62mph in 3.8s). The GT3-R still comes with Bentley’s four wheel drive, but it gets torque vectoring too and a modified ESC and a chassis tuned for outright cornering ability to make the GT3-R Bentley’s most dynamic road car to date.
A Fine Time To Be A Motorist
Fri, 03 Jan 2014ALREADY cash-strapped motorists are paying millions of pounds for minor infringements after a record number of fines were issued, according to claims made by a national newspaper. The Daily Mail said that drivers are paying out £135 million a year after being caught on camera blocking box junctions or straying into bus lanes. Some 1.32 million fines were issued for minor offences in 2011/12, the newspaper said, a record number and a rise of 16% on the previous year.