NOS SUZUKI OIL SEAL
GV700GLF (85)
Antique, Vintage, Historic for Sale
Oem harley panhead front cylinder 1963 outside oiler 63-65 / .030 over nice!!!!(US $0.99)
(h19) 1961 165 cc harley hummer kicker gear + spring with spacers(US $55.00)
(h17) 1961 165 cc harley hummer transmission gear(US $20.00)
Vintage yamaha dt mx misc. hardware(US $9.99)
(h2) 1961 165cc harley hummer primary chain + sprocket(US $45.00)
(h4) 1961 165 cc harley hummer transmission gear(US $25.00)
Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution X FQ400 (2009) first look
Wed, 27 May 2009By Tim Pollard First Official Pictures 27 May 2009 11:56 Another month, another power-crazed Mitsubishi Evo. This time it’s the most extreme Evo X to date, sporting the eponymous FQ400 badge. That loosely refers to the 403 brake horsepower on tap and the fact that this Evo is effing quick.
Ford agrees to sell Aston Martin
Wed, 14 Mar 2007Ford Motor Company announced this week it has entered into a definitive agreement to sell Aston Martin, its prestigious UK sports car business. The new owner of Aston Martin is a consortium comprised of: David Richards, founder and chairman of Prodrive, a world-leading motorsport and automotive technology company; John Sinders, an avid Aston Martin collector and a backer of Aston Martin Racing; and Investment Dar and Adeem Investment Co, international investment companies headquartered in Kuwait. The sale is expected to close during the second quarter and the transaction values Aston Martin at GBP 479 million ($925 million). As part of the transaction, Ford will retain a GBP 40 million ($77 million) investment in Aston Martin.
Jaguar XJ Diesel – The Swansong plaudit
Wed, 17 Jun 2009The Jaguar XJ 2.7 Diesel has won the 'Greenest Luxury Car' Award And although one of the strengths of Jaguar has been its heritage it has, to a degree, also become its Achilles Heel. The first Jaguar XJs were a triumph when they were launched in 1968, and put Jaguar leaps and bounds ahead of the German competition, in the same way Jaguar had taken the world by storm with the E-Type a few years before. But things started to fall apart for Jaguar in the ’70s with the fiasco that was British Leyland, and by trying to emulate Porsche by making each iteration of the XJ an evolution of the original all they managed to do was cement in the public mindset the failings of the XJ.