Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Epi Snowmobile Gas Cap With Gauge Polaris 700 Sks 97-02 Euro 97 00 02 0703-0350 on 2040-parts.com

US $25.95
Location:

Belchertown, Massachusetts, United States

Belchertown, Massachusetts, United States
Condition:New Manufacturer Part Number:0703-0350 Brand:EPI

EPI Snowmobile Gas Cap With Gauge Polaris 700 SKS 97-02 Euro 97 00 02 0703-0350

main image
EPI Snowmobile Gas Cap With Gauge Polaris 700 SKS 97-02 Euro 97 00 02 0703-0350

Returns terms info goes here.

Shipping terms info goes here.

Contact us info goes here.

Feedback terms info goes here.

eBay Inventory Software and eBay Automated Listing Powered By:

Air Intake & Fuel Systems for Sale

Nissan GT-R beats the Germans - again!

Thu, 22 Jan 2009

By Gareth Evans Motoring Issues 22 January 2009 13:23 Prospective buyers of the Nissan GTR have another reason to brag over their German competitors thanks to the latest residual value figures released by CAP Monitor. After 12 months or 10,000 miles, independent used car valuation data provider CAP Monitor predicts the new GTR will be worth 84% of its new list price. This puts the latest Godzilla incarnation well ahead of rivals from Porsche, Audi and BMW.

Off the line: Fun cars and social responsibility Autoweek op-ed stands the test of time

Fri, 30 Dec 2011

It's been almost 21 years to the day that Autoweek printed Matt DeLorenzo's column “Off the Line: There's room for fast, fun cars in diet of social responsibility.” And in those two decades plus, not much has changed except the vehicles themselves. For example, sports cars like the Bugatti Veyron and Pagani Huayra have astronomically high performance and safety levels; similarly, sport-utility vehicles that haul entire families (and most of their earthly possessions) achieve fuel economy similar to that of 1970s midsize sedans. To read all of DeLorenzo's thoughts and his case for automobiles, click the links to download the article.

Into the Breach: The future of in-car infotainment

Tue, 07 May 2013

In-car infotainment is broken. The best that can be said of the finest systems on the market is that they generally do what one asks of them and don't induce fits of rage. At their worst, they're actively dangerous, spiking the driver's blood pressure, forcing tentative or aggressive behavior at intersections and interchanges—and generally taking the driver outside the flow of traffic.