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M120 H-beam Forged Connecting Rods For Mercedes Benz M120 V12 One Set on 2040-parts.com

US $909.00
Location:

jiading/shanghai/shanghai, China

jiading/shanghai/shanghai, China
Condition:New: A brand-new, unused, unopened, undamaged item in its original packaging (where packaging is applicable). Packaging should be the same as what is found in a retail store, unless the item was packaged by the manufacturer in non-retail packaging, such as an unprinted box or plastic bag. See the seller's listing for full details. See all condition definitions Brand:Hench Performance Warranty:Unspecified Length Manufacturer Part Number:TL0467-H Surface Finish:shot peened Material:4340 alloy Country/Region of Manufacture:China Performance Part:Yes

Land Rover Range-e plug-in diesel hybrid grabs SMMT Award

Wed, 23 Nov 2011

Land Rover Range-e wins SMMT Award Just like every other car maker in the world, Jaguar Land Rover are flirting with and developing hybrid powerplants to keep the government-targeted economy and CO2 levels in check, even though neither Jaguar or Land Rover are close to actually launching a hybrid. In fact, Jaguar recently said that 4WD was the next ambition for their cars – not hybrids – and we won’t see a hybrid from Land Rover until the next wave of Land Rover models start to hit the road in 2013. And even then, any hybrid powerplant is likely to be well after initial launch.

Honda Ridgeline may be near the end of the line

Mon, 12 Apr 2010

Honda is likely to kill the poor-selling Ridgeline unibody pickup after the 2011 model year. "There will be a model-year 2011 Honda Ridgeline but we haven't announced anything beyond that," Honda spokeswoman Christina Ra said. The Ridgeline was introduced in 2005, sharing some chassis components with the Acura MDX SUV.

Cold Fusion: Has the Holy Grail of Energy arrived in E-Cat?

Mon, 14 Nov 2011

Scientists Andrea Rossi talks about his Cold Fusion E-Cat Cold Fusion – or low-energy nuclear reaction as scientists prefer to call it – has been the Holy Grail of energy production since it was first mooted in the 1920s by Austrian scientists Paneth and Peters. Essentially, cold fusion is a low energy, contained nuclear reaction which doesn’t use fossil fuels and produces no radiation. The problem is that the laws of thermodynamics say Cold Fusion is impossible.