Icon Superduty 2 Motorcycle Riding Leather Glove Red Black Large Lg L on 2040-parts.com
Goshen, Indiana, US
Gloves for Sale
- Icon justice mesh motorcycle riding glove blue black xlarge xl(US $60.00)
- Icon womens pursuit perforated leather motorcycle riding glove white large lg l(US $75.00)
- Icon womens pursuit perforated leather motorcycle riding glove black large lg l(US $75.00)
- Icon justice mesh motorcycle riding glove yellow black xlarge xl(US $60.00)
- Icon overlord motorcycle riding short glove black tan 2xlarge xxl(US $130.00)
- Genuine fly racing 805 youth size 6 yellow / black gloves # 360-15306(US $18.50)
Lotus Elise Club Racer Launched
Fri, 18 Feb 2011The Lotus Elise Club Racer Lotus may have plans to be the next Aston Martin, but for now it’s stuck with an Evora that’s not selling as well as it should and an Elise that is basically the same as the car that launched a decade ago. The plan with the Evora – apart from the rather odd move of getting Mansory to tart up an Evora – is to get the Germans in to give the Evora’s interior some class. As for the Lotus Elise, all there really is to do – because it has a hard-core clientele anyway – is to divvy up the odd special.
BMW boss tells the truth about electric cars. And then has to apologise for doing so.
Sun, 01 May 2011BMW US CEO Jim O'Donnell - "EVs won't work for more than 90% of drivers" Really, you do have to ask what kind of barking mad world we live in when the boss of a car company is forced to apologise for telling the truth, simply because it upsets a vocal minority (and his bosses, no doubt) We’ve been banging on for years about how useless electric cars are as a replacement for the internal combustion engine, and how they are really only viable as inner-city runarounds and as toys for the better-off. Even then, electric cars have their problems. As inner-city cars EVs certainly do the local environment a favour by transferring emissions to the point of electricity generation instead of the point of use.
Driverless 'pods' to hit Milton Keynes
Mon, 11 Nov 2013DRIVERLESS cars will transport people through the streets of a British town in a £1.5 million project aimed at boosting green technology. From 2015 an initial batch of 20 driver-operated "pods", which will be able to carry two people, will be run on designated pathways separated from pedestrians in Milton Keynes. But by mid-2017 it is planned that 100 fully autonomous vehicles will run on pathways alongside people, using sensors to avoid collisions with obstacles.