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Kawasaki 650 Stock Head Pipe Gasket on 2040-parts.com

US $10.00
Location:

Lake Havasu City, Arizona, United States

Lake Havasu City, Arizona, United States
Condition:New Manufacturer Part Number:5890 Country/Region of Manufacture:United States Country of Manufacture:United States

KAWASAKI 650 STOCK HEAD PIPE GASKET PART # 5890. THIS WILL FIT KAWASAKI 650 X-2/TS/SC/SX WITH STOCK EXHAUST MANIFOLDS AND HEAD PIPE. IF ANY QUESTIONS PLEASE E-MAIL THANKS.

Complete Engines (Watercraft) for Sale

VW Up 5 Door reveal

Mon, 23 Jan 2012

VW Up 5 Door The first photos of the VW Up 5 door have been revealed, a few months after the 3-Door Up debuted officially at the Frankfurt Motor Show. The 3-Door VW Up debuted at the Frankfurt Motor Show back in September, but instead of being the radical departure we were expecting, it turned out to be just a replacement for the VW Lupo. And now we get the first photos of the VW Up 5-Door, which will broaden the appeal of the Up!

Kia Sorento Facelift revealed – take two

Mon, 18 Jun 2012

A facelift for the Kia Sorento has been revealed ahead of its arrival in the UK in the autumn as a 2013 model. Regular readers may think ‘Kia Sorento facelift? Haven’t we seen that before?’ And you’d be right.

Kia Car Design Award winners announced in Beijing

Wed, 30 May 2012

The first Kia Car Design Award was successfully concluded on 20 May in Beijing, with Chinese student Li Bai being presented the prize for first place by Seon-Ho Youn, Vice President of Kia Design Center. Bai, from Tsinghua Academy of Fine Arts, became the first ever winner of the award for his Kia Rhyme Concept, described by Seon-Ho Youn as "a perfect combination of design and Chinese culture." Bai's luxury sports car concept was inspired by Chinese philosophy, which can be seen in the headlamp design that reflects the traditional Chinese Ba gua, or ‘Eight Diagrams'. These are eight diagrams used in Taoist cosmology that represent the fundamental principles of reality through three lines, each line either 'broken' or 'unbroken', representing either yin or yang.