Flowtech 53606 H-pipe Off Road 2.5" Ford Mustang 1994-1995 5.0l on 2040-parts.com
Suitland, Maryland, US
Exhaust Pipes & Tips for Sale
- Patriot exhaust side pipe triple lake steel chrome 2" dia inlet 70" long kit(US $264.97)
- Car alloy muffler exhaust tailpipe tip inclined tube suit tailpipe size 40-55mm(US $20.99)
- Bonez 3" down pipe mazda rx7 fd (free s&h to lower 48 states)(US $149.99)
- Afe performance(US $70.00)
- Bmw e36 325i ,325is new exhaust tailpipe tip black chrome (US $39.99)
- Bmw e36 325i , 325is new exhaust tailpipe tip chrome (US $39.99)
White House pushes automakers toward 54.5-mpg target by 2025
Tue, 26 Jul 2011The White House is pushing automakers to agree by Wednesday to a corporate average fuel economy target of 54.5 mpg by 2025--a figure 1.7 mpg less than the 56.2 mpg standard it floated earlier this month. The easing of the White House plan stems from a concession to makers of light trucks and SUVs, and particularly larger vehicles in that segment, such as Ford's F-150, sources said. The latest White House proposal, the most definitive of any it has put forth, calls for a 5 percent annual mileage increase for cars from 2017-2025, said industry and congressional officials who asked not to be named because their discussions with the White House are confidential.
Lewis Hamilton takes pole at British Grand Prix – Mercedes front row
Sat, 29 Jun 2013Lewis Hamilton & Nico Rosberg (pictured) celebrate their front row at the British Grand Prix Mercedes may have turned in some stunning qualifying laps this year (although their race performance hasn’t really matched up) but Hamilton’s pole at the 2013 British Grand Prix was a stunner – almost half a second (0.452s) ahead of team mate Nico Rosberg. The pole for Hamilton – his first since the Chinese Grand Prix – was a corker (as was Rosberg’s, to be fair) and left the Red Bulls relegated to the second row with Vettel in third and the newly ‘retired’ Mark Webber in fourth. But whether the stunning lap by Hamilton presages an impossible task for Red Bull tomorrow, we’ll have to wait and see.
Brits would rather drive than walk
Wed, 25 Jun 2014ALMOST HALF (47%) of all people in the UK would rather drive than walk for a journey of up to one mile and 48% drive to work instead of trying to use any other form of transport. Despite a one mile journey taking very little more time to walk than drive, only 38% of drivers said they would use their feet in place of the car for such short journeys. Even though short journeys cause the most pollution and damage to cars, half said they would still drive.