Gto Firebird Lemans Bonneville Grant Black Steering Wheel 13.75" Shallow Dish on 2040-parts.com
Severn, Maryland, US
Steering Wheels & Horns for Sale
- 67-74 ford bronco grant real wood walnut steering wheel 15" in stock(US $179.95)
- 1970-77 mercury comet cougar montego marquis grant walnut steering wheel 15" ss(US $179.95)
- New! 1968 chevy camaro grant black steering wheel 13.5" 13 1/2"(US $89.95)
- 2010-2012 elantra touring steering wheel used(US $35.00)
- Alarm horn subaru impreza wrx 2002(US $5.00)
- Car steering wheel knob type r folding suicide spinner power handle(US $8.99)
Third annual World Automotive Design Competition
Wed, 10 Mar 2004The third annual World Automotive Design Competition, sponsored by Alias, was hosted by the Canadian International Auto Show in Toronto, Ontario, on February 12. Britain's Coventry School of Art and Design, and Tsinghua University in Beijing, China were the big winners, together garnering seven of the eight prizes. Ninety-four students from twenty design schools from China, Brazil, Japan, France, Korea, England, Wales, Italy, Spain, India, Sweden, the USA and Canada competed to win over US$140,000 in prizes.
Got a Supercar? Going to Goodwood FoS? They’ve got you covered.
Fri, 31 May 2013You’ll now be able to park your Supercar at the Goodwood FoS The 2013 Goodwood Festival of Speed is looming, and apart from the usual mix of petrol, faces and cars there’s a new innovation to get more supercars in front of the petrolheads that flock to Sussex for a summer fix of high octane fuel – forward parking for supercars. If you’ve ever been to Goodwood – and if you haven’t, you should – then you’ll be a little overwhelmed with the number of supercars littering the car park. Well, a field that’s a bit of a walk away from the main action, and where everyone parks.
One Lap of the Web: Moby Dick, mass transit failures, and the return of the Ford Rotunda
Mon, 16 Sep 2013-- The Porsche 935/78 race car, perhaps better known as Moby Dick, looks a bit like a typical 911 that someone heated up until it was pliable and then slowly, carefully stretched until its nose and tail were elongated past the point of absurdity. And then someone else came along and stuck a giant wing on the back. But it is a real car, and Speedhunters has proof in the form of a photo essay.