Fly Racing Neoprene Life Vest Red/gray Xxx-large 52-56in. on 2040-parts.com
South Houston, Texas, US
Jackets & Leathers for Sale
- Fly racing neoprene life vest small 32-36in.(US $73.76)
- New joe rocket phoenix 5.0 adult mesh jacket, black/black, med/md(US $152.99)
- River road mortar motorcycle jacket black size 52(US $223.02)
- River road biker skull graphx motorcycle jacket black size women's-x-large(US $182.74)
- River road black pearl leather motorcycle jacket women's size large(US $163.63)
- *fast shipping* arctiva comp 8 "women's" insulated motorcycle jacket(US $210.00)
Ferrari Enzo successor to make 920 hp
Fri, 17 Feb 2012About a decade and a half after Porsche eschewed its lightness-and-small-displacement strategy and built a five-liter sports racer to take down Ferrari at Le Mans, a different sort of war kicked off between the two marques: a battle for supremacy in the super-supercar market. In 1984, Ferrari built a radically modified twin-turbo 308 GTB with an eye toward Group B road-racing rules. Porsche countered the resultant 288 GTO with the mighty 959, which launched at about the same time as the 288's successor, the practically skeletal and infinitely loopier F40.
Honda goes social with the Sounds of Civic songwriting contest
Tue, 17 May 2011It seems all automakers are tapping the social-media networks these days. From the Ford Mustang Mayhem package to the Toyota Prius plural campaign, conventional wisdom is there's nothing a few thousand Facebook fans can't handle. The latest automaker to hop the train is Honda, which is sponsoring a creative songwriting competition called the Sounds of Civic to mark the debut of the 2012 Honda Civic.
Hackers compromise Prius, seize control of wheel, brakes and more
Thu, 25 Jul 2013As an enthusiast, you're probably already worried about an autonomous car ripping the joy -- and the steering wheel -- from your hands. Now, according to Andy Greenberg at Forbes, you also have to worry about hackers ripping the steering wheel out of your car's hands (boy, do we feel strange writing that). That's because a car's computerized systems are as prone to hacking as your malware-laden desktop.