Innovate Motorsports 3812 Serial Patch Cable For Lm-2 - Connect Other Mts Device on 2040-parts.com
North Beach, Maryland, United States
Gauges for Sale
- Innovate motorsports 3838 1" tall stainless steel extended bung/plug kit(US $19.99)
- Innovate motorsports 3736 stainless steel exhaust bung and plug kit(US $19.99)
- Innovate motorsports 3735 exhaust bung and plug kit (mild steel)(US $19.99)
- Innovate motorsports 3793 db blue wideband gauge only 0-5 volt input linear (2 1(US $91.38)
- Innovate motorsports 3746 replacement program cable mts lc-1 dl-32 lma-3 ssi-4(US $20.99)
- Innovate motorsports 3802 g3 complete wideband gauge kit (2 1/16 52mm) with lc-1(US $236.63)
Audi RS3 (2010) first official pictures
Mon, 22 Nov 2010Audi has today published its first official pictures of the much-scooped RS3 Sportback. As we predicted, the RS3 adopts the 2.5-litre five-cylinder engine from the TT RS. With 335bhp on tap Audi can, for now at least, stake a claim to the hot hatch top trumps. Of course.
VW to intro Passat BlueMotion Concept at Detroit auto show
Wed, 08 Jan 2014While performance heads are anxiously awaiting the North American debut of the hot-heat Mk VII Golf R at the Detroit auto show, Volkswagen's Passat BlueMotion Concept offers never-before technology in the Yank/Canuck family sedan segment: a four-pot motor with cylinder deactivation. Based on the EA211 1.4L turbo motor we sampled last year in the Euro-market Audi A3 sedan, the Passat BlueMotion Concept's engine is capable of shutting down the middle two cylinders during cruise, and features the Jetta Hybrid's gearbox, a twin-clutch unit capable of decoupling from the engine during off-throttle coasting. In the Passat's application, the 1.4 puts out 150 hp and 184 lb-ft of torque; VW suggests its highway fuel economy will stand at 42 mpg.
Mazda sells 10 millionth car in America
Wed, 23 Oct 2013The first car Mazda ever sold in America was the R100, a cute lil' two-door fastback that was, unsurprisingly, rotary-powered. The year was 1970. Iggy Pop had made that much explicitly clear with "1970." Just imagine how weird it must have been for Americans to wrap their minds around some tiny Japanese upstart, selling a car approximately the size of a 1970 Cadillac Fleetwood Brougham's wheelwell, powered by -- what's this, German technology?