Oil Change & Lube for Sale
- Suzuki r5000 ecstar mineral oil change kit 4 quart 990a0-01e10-4kt(US $59.95)
- Yukon gear oiladd friction modifier(US $27.65)
- Klotz r-50 synthetic racing techniplate gallon kl-105(US $83.95)
- Maxima maxima 80916 hi-temp waterproof grease 16oz.(US $12.99)
- Three bond 1207b100g 1207b gasket maker(US $24.99)
- Maxima maxima 90901 530mx oil 1l.(US $21.99)
Citroen Revolte surfaces
Thu, 10 Sep 2009The Citroen Revolte Concept - the new 2CV? It’s looking increasingly likely that this new Citroen will revive the 2CV moniker. But that referred to ‘Two Steam Horses’, so unless this is one very eco car powered by a rubber band and a clockwork mechanism I guess the name will be there for nostalgic reasons rather than denoting anything specific.
Mazda appoints Brit Kevin Rice as new European design chief
Mon, 18 Aug 2014By Tim Pollard Motor Industry 18 August 2014 10:13 Mazda has appointed Kevin Rice as its new European design director to replace the retiring Peter Birtwhistle. Rice joins at a key time for Mazda, which is replacing its model range at a rate of knots. It will show the new 2 supermini at the Paris motor show in October 2014, following the 3 mid-sized hatch and 6 family car which are both less than two years old.
UK's emergency Budget 2010: how it affects motorists
Mon, 21 Jun 2010Chancellor George Osborne will make the emergency spending cuts on Tuesday 22 June By Tim Pollard Motoring Issues 21 June 2010 09:51 The new UK Government's emergency Budget tomorrow is likely to announce a raft of spending cuts and tax rises bound to affect motorists. The new Conservative-Liberal coalition government is taking the unusual step of holding an emergency summer Budget to reduce the national deficit, which stood at £156bn in 2009-10. The senior Cabinet members signed off the details of the Budget on Friday, but the details won't be confirmed until Tuesday 22 June 2010.Here's our preview of what to expect if you're a car owner:VAT riseMost pundits agree that the rate of value added tax will rise from today's 17.5%. If raised to 20% – the upper limit expected – it could raise an extra £11 billion a year for Government coffers.