Modz 10" Vampire Black Machined Golf Cart Wheels And Tires (22x11-r10) Set Of 4 on 2040-parts.com
Golf Car Wheels & Tires for Sale
- Modz 10" vampire glossy black golf cart wheels(US $58.95)
- Arisun cruze 215/35-12 dot golf cart tire street low profile 4-ply - single(US $62.47)
- (4) golf cart 22x10.00-14 trail fox tires on 14x7 black/bronze hercules wheels(US $759.00)
- Modz 10" vampire gunmetal golf cart wheels and tires (20x10-r10) - set of 4(US $719.95)
- Modz 10" vampire gunmetal golf cart wheels and tires (22x11-r10) - set of 4(US $753.95)
- Modz 10" vampire glossy black golf cart wheels and tires (205-50-10) - set of 4(US $468.95)
Lotus Evora Cup (2010): first official pictures
Thu, 14 Jan 2010This is the Lotus Evora Cup, unveiled at the Autosport International show today. With a 4.0-litre engine, an aero kit created by Italian specialists Dallara, and the road car's sweet chassis, the Evora Cup should turn a special sports car into an outstanding racer. Underneath the evocative Epsom Green paint and Solar Yellow stripe, the Cup is still fundamentally the same as a road-going Evora – this isn’t a silhouette racer.
Top Gear 'regrets' Clarkson remark
Thu, 24 Apr 2014TOP GEAR'S producer has apologised after broadcasting a "light-hearted" joke by Jeremy Clarkson that sparked a complaint of racism. The episode, which was filmed in Burma and Thailand and shown in March, featured a scene where the motoring show's stars built a bridge over the River Kwai and as an Asian man walked over it Clarkson said: "That is a proud moment, but there's a slope on it." Somi Guha, an actress who complained to the BBC, said the use of the phrase was an example of "casual racism" and "gross misconduct". The BBC2 show's executive producer, Andy Wilman, said: "When we used the word slope in the recent Top Gear Burma Special it was a light-hearted word play joke referencing both the build quality of the bridge and the local Asian man who was crossing it.
Concept Car of the Week: Bizzarrini Manta (1968)
Fri, 05 Sep 2014In the latter half of 1965, Giotto Bizzarrini began working on a racing car designed to compete with the Ford GT40, Ferrari 250P and the Porsche 906. The result was the P538, his most sophisticated car to date. The first two examples built were fitted with Lamborghini V12 engines and sold to American buyers to compete in SCCA races, while the third used a highly modified 5.4-liter V8 from the Chevrolet Corvette.