Sweats & Hoodies for Sale
- New z1r ashwood flannel shirts(US $114.95)
- New factory effex kawasaki throwback hat(US $28.45)
- Throttle threads snow shop shirt #(US $69.95)
- Fits yam collection fits yam motor t-shirt (large, black)(US $37.17)
- Fxr snowmobile womens pulse softshell jacket - astro dust/merlot(US $129.99)
- 44109m simpson racing original hoodie(US $28.83)
AutoRama: Hot-rodding, chrome and speed return
Fri, 06 Mar 2009Chop, drop and roll--that's the unofficial motto at AutoRama, the 57th-annual festival of hot rods and custom cars in Detroit. Chop--as in slice the roof off your speedster with some unnatural surgery to the A- and C-pillars. Drop--as in drop the biggest motor you can find under the hood.
Maybach's £678k Landaulet (2008): first official pictures
Mon, 25 Feb 2008By Mark Nichol First Official Pictures 25 February 2008 12:02 Maybach has announced it will put the Landaulet, a semi-convertible based on the Maybach 62 S limousine, into production thanks to an ‘overwhelming response from the public’. The Landaulet was first seen last November as a concept, and the production version will cost a staggering £678,000, which means taking the roof off a 62 S doubles its value. Or rather its price...
News watch October 2012: today's industry news
Wed, 31 Oct 2012Welcome to CAR Magazine's news aggregator as we round up the daily stories in the auto industry. Top tip: news summaries are added from the top hour-by-hou Wednesday 31 October 2012• It's emerged GM's European 2012 earnings are down nearly half a billion dollars in Europe, where it now expects to lose $1.5bn to $1.8bn before interest and taxes for the full year (DetNews)• Ford has posted a third-quarter net profit of $1.63bn (£101bn) - almost matching its eventual profit total for the entire year 2011. Despite painful losses in Europe (Ford expects to lose $1bn in Europe alone this year) a resurgent North American market has buoyed Fords sales even higher than previous forecasts (Automotive News Europe)• Fiat CEO Sergio Marchionne has weighed in against Republican presedential nominee Mitt Romney, who argued that a move towards Chinese production would harm American jobs.