Carburetor Parts for Sale
- Holley extra short high flow throttle blade screws, aed bg demon grant qft carbs(US $6.95)
- Mr gasket 1932 carburetor adapter square bore (US $20.00)
- Holley high flow throttle blade screws & driver, aed bg demon grant qft carbs(US $14.95)
- Jegs performance products 15932k1 fuel log and regulator kit includes:(US $542.99)
- Holley power valve blowout protector kit, quick & easy, aed bg demon grant qft(US $12.95)
- Jegs performance products 15931k1 fuel log and regulator kit includes:(US $377.99)
Win a limited-run Lewis Hamilton portrait
Wed, 19 Aug 2009By Ben Pulman Competitions 19 August 2009 09:00 CAR Online has teamed up with Mobil 1 to offer you the chance to win a limited-edition print of Lewis Hamilton, based on a portrait of the F1 driver which used the oil from his own race car. Click here to enter our competition Earlier this year US artist David Macaluso painted a portrait of Lewis Hamilton using the oil from the sump of the current F1 champ’s title-winning grand prix car. And now CAR is giving away one of 50 limited-run prints being produced.
BMW X4 to launch at New York Auto Show in April
Tue, 31 Dec 2013BMW X4 to launch at New York Auto Show in April The surprising success of the coupe version of the BMW X5 – the BMW X6 – made it highly probable that BMW would pull a similar trick with the X3 by building a coupe version of their smaller SUV. That probability became a certainty when BMW revealed a the BMW X4 Concept at the Shanghai Motor Show, looking just like an X6 on a boil wash. Although BMW didn’t give any major details about what goes under the X4′s bonnet, it’s safe to assume the X4 will come with a similar engine lineup to the X3, an interior that’s also similar and a price point that’s a bit higher.
Tomorrow's world: the touchscreen steering wheel
Mon, 13 Jun 2011You might think the steering wheel has done a pretty good job of directing cars for the past century. But now a team of researchers from the University of Stuttgart is attempting to reinvent the wheel. The scientists have come up with a touchscreen steering wheel, which they reckon could replace the humble wheel with stereo and cruise controls.