Connecting Rods for Sale
- Eagle sir5090fb sbf 5140 forged i-beam rods 5.090in connecting rod, sir, i beam,(US $453.47)
- Qa1 rer8 rod end solid 1/2in rh 1/2in bore carbon rod end, solid, 1/2 in bore, 1(US $33.52)
- Qa1 pcyml10t rod end - 5/8in x 5/8in lh high mis-alignment rod end, pcym-t serie(US $49.38)
- Qa1 rer12 solid rod eye - 3/4in thread 3/4in hole rod end, solid, 3/4 in bore, 3(US $39.32)
- Eagle crs5400s3d sbf 4340 forged h-beam rods 5.400 w/2.123 pin connecting rod, h(US $686.49)
- Qa1 cfr5 rod end - 5/16in x 5/16 in 24 rh steel - female rod end, cf series, sp(US $31.40)
Shocking stats reveal mobile use while driving
Tue, 22 Apr 2014AS MANY as 13% of drivers are still using hand-held mobile phones while at the wheel, according to a survey. And 4% have admitted to regularly sending or reading text messages while driving, the poll by road safety charity Brake and insurance company Direct Line showed. The number of people owning up to using hand-held mobiles at the wheel has fallen from 36% in 2006 to the current figure of 13%.
Ford Mustang (2014) first official pictures
Thu, 05 Dec 2013By Damion Smy First Official Pictures 05 December 2013 05:00 It’s taken fifty years, but the Ford Mustang will be officially on sale in the UK for the first time next year, sporting V8 and – gulp – four-cylinder engines. Crucially, though, the Flying Ford will be offered in right-hand drive and will come with proper, grown-up independent rear suspension. ‘In Europe we want it to be seen as a credible sports car, and second, that the Mustang and the rest of our range be held in higher opinion,’ says Ford COO Mark Fields.
Hyundai's record year – can it continue? (2013)
Wed, 09 Jan 2013Hyundai’s metamorphosis is complete – it’s now one of the ten most popular car brands in the UK, and the first Korean manufacturer ever to crack into the Premier League of UK car buying habits. Sales in 2012 soared by 18.1% to 74,000 units, while its Kia sister brand scored 66,000 registrations last year, according to the new SMMT figures out this week. The Korean double-act isn’t just a thorn in the side of the established French mainstream brands: it’s killing them off completely.