Hoods for Sale
- Front primed steel panel hood 2004-2010 toyota sienna van replacement to1230194(US $199.56)
- Honda stepwgn 2002 hood [6710500](US $559.00)
- New front primed steel panel hood 2006-2009 honda civic unpainted assembly(US $86.91)
- 1994-2004 gmc sonoma hood 1995-2005 s15 jimmy primered black steel panel slt sls(US $90.95)
- Front primed black steel panel hood 2007-2011 toyota camry replacement usa built(US $202.61)
- 2002 chevy trailblazer ls 4d 4.2l hood release cable 15160712(US $15.00)
Mercedes F1 Schumacher sets the pace in Melbourne
Fri, 16 Mar 2012Mercedes F1 Michael Schumacher - fastest in practice in Australia Michael Schumacher showed some of the promise for Mercedes 2012 F1 in Melbourne, setting the quickest time in damp Friday practice. With the first F1 Grand Prix of the 2012-2013 season taking place this Sunday at Melbourne’s Albert Park, we thought we’d look in at Friday’s practice to see if there are any clues to this year’s form. To be honest, Friday practice is often more tactical than anything else so we shouldn’t read too much in to what’s gone on.
Caterham Seven 160 launches as a back to basics Seven
Tue, 22 Oct 2013Caterham Seven 160 launches as a back to basics Seven The promise of 80bhp from a tiny Suzuki 3-cylinder turbo engine may not sound the perfect recipe for a fun little sports car, but wrapped up in the ‘back to basics’ Caterham Seven 160 it very well could be. Caterham has revealed details of their new entry-level Seven – called 160 – after a tease earlier in the year, which comes with the aforementioned Suzuki 3-pot engine which is powerful enough to promise brisk acceleration of 0-62mph in 6.5 seconds. Caterham has stripped the 160 back to the bone with very low weight, it gets a five-speed manual – from Suzuki but tweaked by Caterham – and a live rear axle.
U-turn for wheelchair row taxi firm
Tue, 14 Jan 2014A TAXI firm that refused to pick up wheelchair users has had to perform a U-turn. Middlesbrough-based Boro Cars, the largest taxi firm in the North East, had originally said refusing disabled passengers was "morally wrong", but it brought in the policy anyway. The firm insists that minibuses cost drivers more to rent and that the standard fares, which are the only fares that can be charged to disabled passengers, are not high enough to earn operators any money.