Eye Wear for Sale
- Bobster bugeye goggles - black / smoke reflective lens(US $10.45)
- Matte brown/polar brown smith optics showdown polarized sunglasses(US $169.00)
- Silver/polar platinum smith optics serpico slim polarized sunglasses(US $119.00)
- Black/merlot fade spy optics omg! sunglasses(US $84.99)
- Gold/polar grey green smith optics serpico slim polarized sunglasses(US $119.00)
- Red/black/yellow-shadow chrome arnette series 3 mx explosive goggles(US $64.95)
Kia Magentis (2011): the first styling sketch
Mon, 22 Feb 2010The new 2011 Kia Magentis design sketch By Tim Pollard First Official Pictures 22 February 2010 11:51 This is our first look at the new 2011 Kia Magentis – a solitary design sketch showing what next year's new family car will look like.The new Magentis will be shown for the first time at the New York auto show on 2 April 2010 and Kia says it is longer, lower and wider than its predecessor. 'The new Magentis features a significantly longer wheelbase and will offer considerably more space for both people and luggage,' says the company.That, however, is the sum of the detail confirmed by Kia on its new family car.When can I buy the new Kia Magentis?Not many people will in the UK – they only sold 333 here last year. But should you want to, the new Magentis goes on sale in spring 2011 in Europe, six months after its US launch.
Infiniti JX Concept finally revealed at Pebble Beach.
Fri, 19 Aug 2011Infiniti JX Concept finally arrives at Pebble We’ve managed to stick with all the teases we’ve seen for the Infiniti JX, or at least from then second JX tease onwards. Despite terminal boredom by the end. So it seems fitting that we should bring you the Infiniti JX in all its glory now it’s finally arrived at Pebble Beach.
Project Car Hell, Rock-and-Stick-Simple Off-Road Trucks Edition: Land Rover or Scout?
Mon, 26 May 2014Last week, the Hell Garage Demons went back 100 years for a couple of challenging centenarian projects, and the temperature of the Automotive Lake of Fire—conveniently located between the junkyard that always closes five minutes before you show up and the parts store whose counter guys have never heard of your make of car—accordingly rose another few hundred degrees. This week, we've decided to go with the kind of vehicles you'll want when society collapses and "rugged individualists" will need to drive many miles down a road of skulls and broken whiskey bottles to barter rat pelts for handy Clovis points. That's right, simple off-road trucks with few moving parts and a heritage of simplicity—none of this complicated computerized crap, modern alloys and independent suspension (at either end) here, just a steel box with enough running gear to make it move.