Other for Sale
- Yamaha suzuki honda kawasaki handle grip 7/8" red set(US $13.99)
- Honda cb550f cb750f 1975-1976 front & rear spoke set 80 pcs. japan(US $73.99)
- Honda cb125 cb125 k3 cb175 exhaust & pipe set (US $79.99)
- Suzuki a100 ts100 ts125 ts185 ts250 ts400 fuel tap (US $14.00)
- Yamaha dt100 dt125 xt400 xt500 xt600 dt200 dt250 hand guards l&r oem "yellow"(US $29.99)
- Honda cb77 ca77 cb72 ca72 cb350 cb250 rear brake stop switch "genuine" japan(US $49.99)
VW group design future
Mon, 23 Jun 2008By Adam Towler Motor Industry 23 June 2008 19:01 VW Group’s Design Director Walter De Silva shed light on the future direction of Volkswagen design during a lecture earlier this week at the old Fiat Lingotto factory in Turin. Extolling his own thoughts on design amid the current world – “constraints are what promotes creativity” - he described VW as being immersed in a process of defining their design language as Audi had already done to achieve the quality and diversity necessary. Audi design DNA was “understood by everyone in the company” he said, “right down to the smallest details”.
Volvo V60 diesel plug-in hybrid – again
Mon, 21 Feb 2011Volvo V60 Plug-in Diesel Hybrid Last month we reported on the innovative Volvo V60 diesel plug-in hybrid, a proper advance in hybrid gubbins which Volvo are planning on revealing – in practically production-ready form – at next weeks Geneva Motor Show. We first reported Volvo’s intention to bring a diesel hybrid to market by 2012 back in 2009, and the story we ran at the end of January was confirmation of that. But now Volvo has churned out a chunky press release to tell us exactly what the V60 plug-in hybrid will offer, so we thought we ought to revisit this story one more time before Geneva.
Chill out: coolest truck ever made of ice
Fri, 03 Jan 2014Just as humans find it difficult getting out of bed on a cold morning, cars often don’t like starting when temperatures are below freezing. Not only is there more pressure on car batteries in the winter as we rely on them for heating and lighting, but they also struggle to hold their charge. So, in a bid to prove that their batteries are unbeatable in the cold, a Canadian company has built a pick-up truck out of ice.