Hawk Performance Hb472f.650 Disc Brake Pad on 2040-parts.com
San Diego, California, United States
Discs, Rotors & Hardware for Sale
- Hawk performance hb524b.740 disc brake pad(US $113.89)
- Hawk performance hb143s.680 disc brake pad(US $181.92)
- Hawk performance hb365z.728 disc brake pad fits 98-12 beetle golf jetta(US $121.15)
- Hawk performance hb567f.694 disc brake pad fits armada pathfinder qx56 titan(US $105.24)
- Hawk performance hb467f.540 disc brake pad fits 04-09 bonneville cts srx sts(US $119.14)
- Hawk performance hb571z.605 disc brake pad fits 04-07 3 5 s40(US $103.23)
Another Ayrton Senna Honda NSX for sale
Tue, 28 Jan 2014Ayrton Senna’s Honda NSX (pictured) is expected to fetch £75-85k Ayrton Senna was arguably the greatest F1 driver of all time, and his death 20 years ago at Imola sent shock waves through the sport and deprived F1 fans of more years of Senna’s driving prowess. But driving F1 cars wasn’t the only thing Senna did; just like today’s F1 drivers he was also involved in road car development, and during his time with McLaren he was a part of Honda’s (engine suppliers at the time for McLaren) development of the original NSX. So any Honda NSX with a clear link to Senna can reasonably expect to be a desirable car for collectors and F1 fans to acquire, and the Honda NSX up for grabs at Silverstone Auctions’ sale next month has a very clear Senna link.
Frankfurt Motor Show news review: making sense of the 2013 IAA show
Wed, 11 Sep 2013Newspress Frequently the car that attracts people’s attention at motor shows is an exotic-looking beast that everyone ‑ creators included ‑ know will never see the grind of a production line. Unusually, at the 2013 Frankfurt Motor Show press day, the car on everyone’s lips was a model that many journalists have already driven, and for which dealers are already taking orders: the BMW i3. With its skinny tyres and boxy, upright stance, the all-electric model isn’t as easy on the eye as the usual headline-grabbers.
Parents 'risking kids' lives' on defective tyres
Tue, 26 Aug 2014MORE THAN 30% of parents are ferrying their most precious cargo around on illegal tyres, a new study has found. Road safety charity TyreSafe has reported that one of its members carried out a study at a Shropshire primary school, where almost a third of the cars dropping children off at school were wearing tyres that were either past their wear markers, were incorrectly inflated, had bulges or cuts, or had foreign objects sticking out of them. “The start of the new academic year means that we will be experiencing many more cars on the roads, particularly at peak times of the day,” comments Stuart Jackson, chairman, TyreSafe.