Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

New Kawasaki 440 Kerker Pipe W/ Head Pipe on 2040-parts.com

US $175.00
Location:

Brea, California, US

Brea, California, US
Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Refund will be given as:Money Back Item must be returned within:14 Days Return policy details:CUSTOMER MUST CONTACT US VIA PHONE (714)671-1145 AND GET A RA# AND AUTHORIZATION FOR RETURN. NO EMAILS!! IF YOU GOT WHAT YOU ORDERED AND THEN FIND OUT YOU NEEDED A DIFFERENT ITEM. NO RETURN WILL BE ALLOWED. RETURNS ARE ALLOWED FOR THE FOLLOWING REASONS. DAMAGE TO ITEM. WRONG ITEM WAS SENT. DESCRIPTION OF ITEM WAS NOT ACCURATE.. Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Restocking Fee:No

Hamana, hamana, hamana… SOLD!

Sat, 17 Jan 2009

The first thing that hits you driving over the hundreds of miles of desert on the way to see the monster Scottsdale classic and collector car auctions every January is the HUGE number of motor homes scattered willy nilly all across the sand and rocks like dice. Every winter Arizona sprouts fields of Winnebegos and Hitchhiker IIs like big, rectangular wildflowers, only less pretty (Not counting the requisite lion and dolphin murals airbrushed on the backs, what are those about, anyway?). Can snowy winters in Saskatchewan really be that bad?

GM posts $6 billion loss, burns $10.2 billion in cash as sales fall

Thu, 07 May 2009

General Motors, facing a June 1 U.S. restructuring deadline to avoid bankruptcy, posted a $6 billion net loss in the first quarter and burned through $10.2 billion in cash as global auto sales plunged. GM had $11.6 in cash reserves on March 31, down from $14.2 billion at the end of the fourth quarter.

Concept Car of the Week: Mercedes F200 Imagination (1996)

Fri, 08 Aug 2014

The F200 Imagination was designed at Mercedes' Advanced Design studio in Tokyo, in response to the question 'does the car of the future still have a steering wheel and foot-operated controls?' Take a look at the car's interior and the answer was fairly emphatic, as the steering wheel and pedals were replaced by joysticks, called Sidesticks, that operated the throttle, brakes and steering by wire. There were two sticks to choose from, one on the left of the cabin and one in the center console. However, both had the same function – push forward to accelerate, left or right to turn, and back to brake – so either of the front passengers could control the car.