One Michelin Latitude Tour Hp Zp 255/50/19 P255/50r19 255 50 19 Tire # 17349 Qa on 2040-parts.com
Allentown, Pennsylvania, US
Tires for Sale
- 2 milestar sv-307 awd 215/70r16 215/70/16 p215/70r16 215 70 16 tires # 27487 qa(US $115.57)
- 2 nice michelin hydroedge, 205/55/16 p205/55r16 205 55 16, tire # 25974 qa(US $149.57)
- 1 bridgestone dueler h/t 684ii 235/65/16 tire (z35112)(US $69.99)
- 2 michelin pilot exalto a/s, 215/60/16 p215/60r16 215 60 16, tires # 22920 q(US $101.97)
- 2 nice, michelin destiny, 205/60/16 p205/60r16 205 60 16 tires # 46960 q(US $114.72)
- 235/55r18 bridgestone dueler alenza h/l 400 235/55/18 2355518 used tire 18-1g(US $63.99)
Infiniti Q30 concept stars at the 2013 Frankfurt Motor Show
Wed, 11 Sep 2013The Infiniti Q30 Concept could well be one of the most important cars debuting here at the 2013 Frankfurt Motor Show. The brand has big aspirations to rival premium players, and its new up-market Q30 concept hatchback could be the car to take the fight to Audi, BMW and Mercedes-Benz. Please click on the image above to read more on the Infiniti Q30 concept
Jaguar XFR-S – tease take 2
Tue, 27 Nov 2012The Jaguar XFR-S – a more powerful version of the XFR – will debut tomorrow at the Los Angeles Auto Show, but we get a second tease first. Jaguar’s punt at making the now ageing XFR credible against the new BMW M5 – the Jaguar XFR-S – is getting its debut at the Los Angeles Auto Show tomorrow, but ahead of that full reveal Jaguar is teasing interest with its second teaser photo of the most powerful saloon they’ve ever built. Last week we got a front view of the XFR-S with its more aggressive nose (and Jaguar’s favourite ‘Speedy’ blue paint job) and this week we get to see the thumping great carbon fibre rear wing Jaguar has bolted on the back of the XFR-S.
CAFE standard set at 54.5 mpg by 2025
Wed, 29 Aug 2012The final version of the new corporate average fuel economy (CAFE) standard was released today and, as expected, automakers will need to attain a fleet average of 54.5 mpg by 2025. The rules include electric and hybrid vehicles and—as of today—natural gas vehicles. The Environmental Protection Agency and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration proposed the rules in November, after reaching an agreement with automakers last July.