Jba Headers For 88-95 Gm Truck 5.0l & 5.7l on 2040-parts.com
San Dimas, California, US
Exhaust Headers for Sale
- Charger jba cat4ward headers - 2967sy(US $280.14)
- Hedman street hedders full-length painted 1 3/4" primaries 89260(US $199.97)
- Hedman street hedders full-length painted 1 5/8" primaries 79170(US $175.97)
- Borla exhaust performance header - 17053(US $438.89)
- Patriot full-length headers silver ceramic coated 1 5/8" primaries h8049-1(US $354.97)
- Hedman standard duty uncoated headers 37010(US $183.95)
Belgian Grand Prix (2013) RESULT
Sun, 25 Aug 2013Belgian Grand Prix (2013) RESULT After the last outing for F1 in Hungary three weeks ago, Lewis Hamilton goes in to the Belgian Grand Prix at Spa-Francorchamps with a win under his belt and pole position too, so he should have had a great chance of another win. But it didn’t work out like that. In fact, the 2013 Belgian Grand Prix turned in to a demonstration of the powers of Sebastian Vettel and his Red Bull, as the German wasted no time taking Hamilton in the very early stages before going on to control the race from the front, and take a resounding victory with his fifth win of the season.
Chris Harris finds the McLaren P1 “a whole new thing” (video)
Thu, 20 Feb 2014Chris Harris and McLaren’s Chris Goodwin in the McLaren P1 We know the McLaren P1 is exceptional, and we’ve heard almost the same ‘game changer’ dialogue from anyone who’s driven it. We’ve also seen the McLarenj P1 on the move in the recent Top Gear with Jeremy scaring himself witless in Belgium as his brain came to terms with the awesome 903bhp at the P1′s disposal on a less than forgiving Spa circuit in damp conditions. But what we have here – in case you’ve not seen it elsewhere – is a video review of the McLaren P1 from Drive’s Chris Harris, and it does the best job we’ve seen of explaining just why the P1 is so special and why it’s “…a whole new thing”.
GPS signals trump cellular in FCC battle
Tue, 28 Feb 2012Bandwidth has become a precious commodity. Just ask any owner of a car that has an analog OnStar system that wound up being a useless brick when digital cellular signals were declared to be the only game in town. LightSquared, a company that grew out of the satellite-communications industry, is banking that the chunk of spectrum it holds the rights to will help smaller, regional competitors compete with the big wireless providers.