Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Maule M-6 Main Gear Springs on 2040-parts.com

US $30.00
Location:

Salome, Arizona, US

Salome, Arizona, US
Returns Accepted:ReturnsNotAccepted Warranty:No

Sold the Maule M-6 a while back so selling a spare set of springs for the main gear.

Who's Where: Toyota design chief moves to head-up Yamaha design

Tue, 15 Jul 2014

Akihiro Dezi Nagaya has moved from his position as chief designer at Toyota to Yamaha Motor Company, where he will take up the post of chief general manager of design. The move became effective on 1 July, and sees Nagaya move from his position as CEO of Tecno Art Research, a freelance design office for Toyota projects located in Nagoya, Japan. His replacement at Tecno Art Research is Hiroshi Kawahara, Toyota's former general manager of advanced design.

Pagani Zonda R at the Nurburgring: on video

Fri, 06 Aug 2010

The phrase 'broken record' at the Nurburgring has become ever so slightly over-used. Every other week, another manufacturer steps forward with claims of shaving time off the fabled record.  Pagani are guilty of this as much as the next supercar brand. Yet for some strange reason, you can almost forgive them when you watch the documentary video footage below of Horacio Pagani talking you through the record-breaking, £1.3m, track-special Zonda R.

Mercedes-Benz CLS shooting brake sparkles at Goodwood

Mon, 02 Jul 2012

Mercedes-Benz used the annual Goodwood Festival of Speed as the backdrop for the premiere of the definitive production version of its stylish new CLS shooting brake in Sussex, England. Set to go on sale across Europe in October, the new sporting wagon was given a production go-ahead by Mercedes boss Dieter Zetsche following positive reaction to the earlier E-class-based ConceptFascination prototype car unveiled at the 2008 Paris motor show and the subsequent CLS shooting brake show car wheeled out at the 2010 Beijing motor show. Sadly, though, there are no plans to sell the new Mercedes-Benz model in North America, owing to what one official described to Autoweek as "the continued aversion to wagons by U.S.