Harley Davidson Dyna Fxdci Superglide 05 Motorcycle Rear Wheel 16" on 2040-parts.com
Lincoln, Nebraska, US
Wheels, Tires for Sale
- Revtech nitro 18 spoke chrome 17x3.5 custom wheel harley chopper bobber touring(US $599.99)
- Harley davidson dyna fxdci superglide 05 motorcycle rear tire 16"(US $105.00)
- New pirelli sport demon bias sport/touring tire rear (69v), 140/80-17(US $138.57)
- Pirelli scorpion rally dakar rally winning tire-dot approved rear 69r,150/70-17(US $140.82)
- Pirelli scorpion trail performance touring/dual-sport tire rear 65h, 130/80r17(US $142.66)
- New metzeler mce karoo 2 dual sport tire rear 70r, 140/80-18(US $112.30)
Nissan ESFLOW: Electric Sports Car
Wed, 09 Feb 2011Nissan ESFLOW Electric Sports Car As Tesla has already proved, if you throw enough money at it, employ enough publicists (including self-publicists) and string enough laptop batteries together, you can make an electric sports car. And, because of the lightness of construct and instant torque of an electric motor, you can make it sprint to 60mph in pretty short shrift. Whether, with all the lard that comes with thousands of laptop batteries, you can make it go round corners properly… Which has obviously inspired Nissan to send the LEAF and the 370Z off to conjugate somewhere suitable, with orders to deliver up the resulting oxymoron – an electric sports car – to the Geneva Motor Show.
Hiriko folding car: The solution to urban car sharing? [w/video]
Wed, 08 Aug 2012The Hiriko Driving Mobility Group has moved into the manufacturing trial of its two-seater electric microcar, which it hopes will offer a new car-sharing program that will transform the way we travel around our cities. The ‘first-mile' problem – moving between the commuter's home and mass transit hubs – and the ‘last-mile' problem – from mass transit to the workplace – has increased dramatically over the past few decades as more of us live in urban environments. 10 years ago researchers at the Michigan Institute of Technology (M.I.T.) decided to explore alternatives to shuttle buses and other ideas that failed to tackle the problem.
Call for reform over road repair funding
Fri, 06 Jun 2014FUNDING patterns mean most road maintenance is being carried out in "less-efficient, cold and wet" times, a report from a Government spending watchdog has said. The current pattern of funding, combined with the need to spend money within the financial year, means that most maintenance work goes on between September and March, said the report from the National Audit Office (NAO). It went on: "Although this is less disruptive for road users, it is less efficient than carrying out the work at other times of year because materials can be more difficult to handle in cold and wet conditions, and daylight hours are shorter." The report went on: "As a result of the additional funding for emergency repairs, which is made available at the end of the financial year, almost all highways authorities need extra capacity from the market at the same time, which makes it less likely that they will get value for money." The NAO report said there was a "lack of predictability" over road spending adding that historically, local highway authorities spent more revenue on maintenance, but were now carrying out fewer routine activities such as clearing gullies which are essential to preventing water seeping into roads' sub-structure.