Extended Stretched Saddlebags & Fender **no Lids/harley Davidson Touring Bagger on 2040-parts.com
Miami, Florida, US
Fenders for Sale
- Harley davidson street glide flhx front fender (US $68.00)
- Harley davidson bagger extended stretched saddlebags and speaker lids(US $495.00)
- Harley davidson v-rod vrod rear fender(US $120.00)
- Harley davidson stretched saddlebags, 6x9 speaker lids and side covers(US $799.00)
- Harley davidson rear fender touring street glide, road king road glide electra g(US $275.00)
- Honda vfr750 vfr 750 1989 1997 rear tire hugger black - made in england(US $139.95)
Euro NCAP latest results
Wed, 19 Dec 2007By Tim Pollard Motor Industry 19 December 2007 11:36 The latest round of Euro NCAP results are announced today, with another round of high scores from a range of superminis and family cars. But none of the cars tested could manage more than three stars for pedestrian protection. Daihatsu's Materia supermini and, surprisingly, the Honda Civic trailed the pack with only four stars for occupant safety, but the Merc C-class, Renault Laguna, Volvo V70 and – impressively – the tiny Mazda 2 all came out with the top score.
Saab Museum cars for sale
Tue, 17 Jan 2012Saab Museum Cars up for grabs The bankruptcy of Saab has resulted in the entire Saab Museum collection of 120 cars being offered for sale by the liquidators. The final demise of Saab has meant much heartache for Saab’s employees, and lovers of the marque around the world, as more than 60 years of Saab’s history is consigned to the remnants bin – and that even includes Saab’s museum collection of cars, chronicling the history of Saab from 1946 to date. But Saab fans with deep pockets – or one fan with very deep pockets – now have the chance to grab a slice of Saab’s history, as the entire Saab Heritage collection has been put up for sale by lawyers acting for the liquidators.
Monaco Grand Prix 2014: It’s a Mercedes front row – but it’s Rosberg on pole
Sat, 24 May 2014Nico Rosberg (pictured) takes pole for Mercedes at Monaco 2014 Nico Rosberg has taken pole position for tomorrow’s Monaco Grand Prix, but the way in which he took pole position does leave room for doubt. Rosberg did seem quicker in final qualifying, but he ‘went off’ at the Mirabeau corner as final qualifying was coming to a close and depriving Lewis Hamilton of the chance to grab pole on his last qualifying lap. Did Rosberg go off on purpose to wreck Hamilton’s final run?