Kyb Sm5544 Strut Cushion/mount-suspension Strut Mount Bracket on 2040-parts.com
Fremont, California, US
Shocks & Struts for Sale
- Kyb sm5562 strut cushion/mount-suspension strut mount(US $42.89)
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- Kyb sm5543 strut cushion/mount-suspension strut mount bracket(US $21.17)
- 1969-74 datsun-toyota; gabriel red ryder rear shocks(US $28.99)
- kyb adjustable front agx adjustable gas shock absorber 734020(US $34.99)
- New afco racing standard non-adjustable 9" shock shaft, replacement t2/m2 series(US $20.99)
McLaren on track to launch MP4 in U.S. in '11
Wed, 04 Nov 2009McLaren's plan to launch the 200-mph MP4 supercar in the United States and Canada in mid-2011 are on course, says the newly appointed boss of North American operations. Tony Joseph, McLaren's regional director for North America, says rumors that the North American launch of the MP4 is being delayed are untrue. “There is no validity in that story whatsoever,” he says.
Bentley-designed Santa’s sleigh
Wed, 17 Dec 2008By Tim Pollard First Official Pictures 17 December 2008 14:30 We reckon Father Christmas is probably a bit of a Bentley guy: he has a large number of miles to cover in speed and in great comfort – and he needs something big and plush to look after all those presents. What better solution than something mixing the design class of a Bentley with the snow-covering ability of a downhill toboggan? Bentley designers John Paul Gregory imagined a futuristic Santa Azure Sleigh (complete with rifled tailpipes and exposed Bentley Blitzen powerplant), while Yunwoo Jeong turned the Continental GTC cabrio into a sleigh with quad-outrigged headlamps and begoggled Santa.
Italy’s Supercar sales down 80% as Italy heads for 50 year car sales low
Sat, 06 Apr 2013Sales of Supercars in Italy have dropped 80% in the last 5 years and car sales look set to drop to the lowest point since 1966. We all know the Eurozone is finally paying the price for stitching together powerhouse economies and basket case ones with the same blunt fiscal tools to control their economies. And even Italy – once a major Southern European economy – seems to be as big a basket case as Greece and Cyprus if you start to dig a bit.