Personalised Front Seat Covers.any Middle Colour...we Make For All Cars... on 2040-parts.com
Sydney, NSW, Australia
Seat Covers for Sale
- Mustang car seat covers..any colours...we make for all cars...(AU $85.00)
- Skulls....any colour seat covers....we make for all cars...(AU $85.00)
- Jeep mountain scape.. front and back..we make for all models of jeep...(AU $185.00)
- Car seat cushion pu leather brown 10pcs for all car 5 seat general(US $148.30)
- Bats.....any colour seat covers..any colour bats..we make for all cars...(AU $85.00)
- 7pcs hello kitty car belt covers,rearview mirror cover,handbrake cover, cd clip(US $47.99)
Hyundai ix-Metro Concept – too much ‘Design’
Wed, 16 Sep 2009The Hyundai ix-Metro Concept at Frankfurt The new ix35 – despite looking very similar to most offerings in the same sector – is enormously competent – at least in its conception – and well built. Most importantly for buyers it will undercut the current offerings, whilst offering a package the equivalent of the best. But is Hyundai getting a bit too wrapped-up in its Euro-design?
CAR journalist wins top award
Fri, 21 Dec 2007By Ben Pulman Motor Industry 21 December 2007 08:42 CAR's associate editor Tim Pollard has won the industry's Journalist of the Year award 2007. He scooped the prestigious gong at the annual Guild of Motoring Writers awards ceremony at the RAC Club in London for his magazine scoop on the McLaren P11 (the cover story of CAR October 2007). The judges praised Pollard's investigative journalism, which uncovered a dossier of facts, sketches and details of the new junior supercar from the Woking road car and racing specialist.
Vintage-photograph auction at Lime Rock to benefit teen-driver training
Mon, 31 Aug 2009Photographs of racing legends from yesteryear will help the young drivers of tomorrow through an auction over Labor Day weekend at Lime Rock. Autographed vintage photos of famous drivers will be sold to benefit a charity called Survive the Drive, which educates and trains high-school drivers in the Northeast. The program helped more than 10,000 students in the 2008-09 school year.