Kawasaki Brute Force 650/750 Winch Mount (warn) on 2040-parts.com
Hoschton, Georgia, United States
This is a brand new winch mount kit for brute force 650s and 750s. It is manufactured by Warn, however I believe you may be able to use other manufactured winches along with it. Message me with any questions.
|
Winches for Sale
- Yamaha grizzly 600 98-01 warn atv winch mount - 36693 -(US $45.00)
- Kawasaki warn winch mounting kit brute force 650 05-13 straight axle(US $60.00)
- Warn winch mntg kit 00 kodiak 400 fits: yamaha yfm400fa kodiak 4x4 [sra] 60170(US $66.99)
- Warn winch mounting kit fits: honda trx500fa rubicon [sra],trx500fe 84705(US $94.99)
- Warn 87987 winch mount polaris rzr 900 mount kit 37-4457 4505-0464 61-87987(US $94.99)
- 12v combo solenoid relay contactor & winch rocker thumb switch for utv atv
A Chevrolet Corvette the only ‘authenticated' return under GM's 60-day guarantee, Lutz says
Wed, 14 Oct 2009One car has been returned under General Motors' unconventional 60-day return policy--a Chevrolet Corvette. The reason? A customer grew tired of shifting with the manual gearbox, GM vice chairman Bob Lutz said on Wednesday.
Peugeot Exalt Concept at the Paris Motor Show in Euro-Spec
Fri, 05 Sep 2014The European version of the Peugeot Exalt Concept With the Paris Motor Show now looming (just four weeks away) car makers are starting to reveal new cars and new concepts heading for the French capital. Today it’s the turn of Peugeot to reveal an updated version of the Exalt Concept we saw at the Beijing Motor Show in April. The Peugeot Exalt Concept is Peugeot’s next step on from the Onyx Concept, showcasing many of Peugeots’ future design cues and technology all wrapped up in a swoopy coupe saloon that sadly will never see the light of day as a production model.
Planning continues for driverless cars
Thu, 13 Mar 2014OFFICIALS in California have been looking to the future as they bid to legislate for the arrival of hi-tech driver-less cars. A law passed in 2012 set a deadline of the end of this year for the state's Department of Motor Vehicles to decide how to legally integrate the so-called autonomous vehicles - which were once the stuff of science fiction but could be commercially available by the end of the decade. The latest talks on the matter among roads officials focused on how the vehicles will record actions so the data can be used to reconstruct an accident in an effort to trace the cause.