Men's Motorcycle Motorbike Racing Leather Ce Approved Armor Jacket Size Large on 2040-parts.com
South Elgin, Illinois, United States
Jackets & Leathers for Sale
- Men's motorcycle motorbike textile cordura ce approved armor jacket size large(US $79.99)
- New never-used women's bilt tempest waterproof textile motorcycle pants 3xl(US $30.00)
- Womes xs leather fringed sturgis biker vest
- Easyriders women's leather motorcycle jacket medium black(US $37.60)
- Yamaha black yellow motorcycle racing racing trouser : all size available(US $197.99)
- Classic kidney belt
Mercedes-Benz axes Maybach
Fri, 25 Nov 2011High ranking Mercedes-Benz sources have confirmed to Autoweek that the underperforming Maybach brand will be officially killed off in 2013. The decision to disband Mercedes-Benz’s upper luxury marque comes after a decade of disappointing sales for the Maybach 57 and 62 and a recent decision from the German car maker’s chairman Dieter Zetsche not to push ahead with the development replacement models – the likes of which were tentatively due out in 2014 – owing to what one insider describes as a “positive move to focus greater attention on the Mercedes-Benz brand” . “We’ve come to the conclusion that it is better to cut our losses with Maybach than to continue into an uncertain future with a brand that has failed to live up to original sales expectations," the insider said.
Ferrari 599XX sets new Nurburgring lap record
Fri, 23 Apr 2010So about the Ferrari 599XX being a road car...Ah yes. The 599XX is a £1.2 million special that's hardly your average or common Ferrari. Designed for track use, a maximium of 29 will be built, each delivered to carefully selected Ferrari owners granted access to this rolling testbed.
Automakers try to stop increase in ethanol limit to 15 percent of gasoline
Mon, 11 Oct 2010Automakers are seeking to head off an EPA ruling that would allow gasoline to contain 15 percent ethanol, up from 10 percent now, and they've won some bipartisan congressional support. The two main automaker industry lobbies have argued that the U.S. Department of Energy has done insufficient testing to assure that gasoline containing up to 15 percent ethanol won't harm vehicles.