Mercedes 190d 190e 280ce 300e 380sl 420sel 560 Voltage Regulator Hella Oem New on 2040-parts.com
Fort Lauderdale, Florida, United States
Voltage Regulators for Sale
- Standard motor products vr439 new alternator regulator(US $135.86)
- Standard motor products vr163 new alternator regulator(US $48.33)
- Standard motor products vr433 new alternator regulator(US $159.56)
- Standard motor products vr528 new alternator regulator(US $199.08)
- Standard motor products vr180 new alternator regulator(US $66.91)
- Standard motor products vr185 new alternator regulator(US $64.36)
Another Ayrton Senna Honda NSX for sale
Tue, 28 Jan 2014Ayrton Senna’s Honda NSX (pictured) is expected to fetch £75-85k Ayrton Senna was arguably the greatest F1 driver of all time, and his death 20 years ago at Imola sent shock waves through the sport and deprived F1 fans of more years of Senna’s driving prowess. But driving F1 cars wasn’t the only thing Senna did; just like today’s F1 drivers he was also involved in road car development, and during his time with McLaren he was a part of Honda’s (engine suppliers at the time for McLaren) development of the original NSX. So any Honda NSX with a clear link to Senna can reasonably expect to be a desirable car for collectors and F1 fans to acquire, and the Honda NSX up for grabs at Silverstone Auctions’ sale next month has a very clear Senna link.
Jaguar Supermini is Ian Callum’s hobby-horse
Fri, 13 Apr 2012Ian Callum wants Jaguar to build a Supermini Jaguar’s Design boss, Ian Callum, has a passion for Jaguar to build a Supermini – although it could be a way off. Ian Callum’s designs have moved Jaguar from a design pastiche of the past to an individual and contemporary design language that acknowledges the past but cleverly heralds the future. From the XJ to the new F-Type by way of the XF (now even better now it’s closer to Callum’s original C-XF Concept) and even the XK, Callum’s foresight is a big part of Jaguar’s resurgence.
Chevy Volt MPG: Shocking!
Tue, 11 Aug 2009I love the Internet. Specifically, the comments sections on big stories like the Chevy Volt. And it is the same on every site: The first two comments are fairly sensible and actually relate to whatever the story is, then everybody just starts eating each other's young and blaming the government for everything.