Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Fly Racing Evolution Sonar Jersey on 2040-parts.com

US $41.36
Location:

Holland, Michigan, US

Holland, Michigan, US
Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Refund will be given as:Money back or exchange (buyer's choice) Item must be returned within:14 Days Return policy details:Riders Discount accepts both returns or exchanges on all product (except electronic items) within 14 days of receipt. Merchandise must be in new condition with all packaging, manuals, tags, and paperwork intact and unaltered. Buyers are responsible for all shipping charges to exchange or return an item. For returned items, original 'free shipping' freight charges will be deducted from the refunded price. To exchange or return please contact customer service to receive a RMA# and our exchange form. ELECTRONIC ITEMS, due to their special nature CANNOT BE RETURNED OR EXCHANGED for any reason and are solely covered directly through their respective manufacturers. Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Restocking Fee:No Make:Fly Racing

Off-Road Gear for Sale

Peugeot RD Concept at Shanghai

Tue, 21 Apr 2009

  The Peugeot RD Concept - winning entry in a competition to design a car of the future. [ad#ad-1] No, its not a concept that’s likely to go on sale very soon, but it is in fact the winning entry in Peugeot’s competition to produce a futuristic car. The competition was launched at last years Beijing Motor Show, and asked budding designers to ‘Imagine the Peugeot in the Worldwide Megalopolis of tomorrow’.

Ian Callum’s hot-rod love affair: his 1932 Ford Hi-Boy Coupe

Thu, 28 Aug 2014

By Tim Pollard Motoring Issues 28 August 2014 16:32 Jaguar design director Ian Callum unveiled his new-for-2014 Mk2 today – but this is far from his first hot-rod influenced car. Back in February 2007, CAR ran a beautiful seven-page feature on Callum’s own project at the time: a lovingly restored 1932 Ford hot-rod. He’s been a fan of the rodding scene forever and back in 2001 he met Jon Golding of Home Grown Hot Rods.

Mini John Cooper Works WRC: the roll cage in detail

Wed, 06 Jul 2011

Mini claims it’s created the safest WRC car ever – with a little help from Prodrive.  And to prove the point, they’ve opened up the Mini Countryman WRC’s innards and spilled some of the secrets of its rollcage. The Countryman racer is stripped and fitted with a new type of rollcage designed by Prodrive. Its beams curve outwards and the Banbury engineers say it has been designed to withstand impacts much better than the straight crossbeams used in most WRC cars.