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Powder Coated Fuel Cell Gas Tank 45° 1.5" Remote Fill 2.75"filler Neck+cap Blue on 2040-parts.com

US $49.95
Location:

Rowland Heights, California, United States

Rowland Heights, California, United States
Condition:New Brand:Top Street King Materials:Steel / Aluminum Manufacturer Part Number:ALU-FT-C-T1-BL Please Note:Fits Fuel Cells with 12-Bolt Pattern Only Interchange Part Number:Powder-Coated Stainless Steel Neck+Aluminum Cap Thickness:1/8" Other Part Number:Racing Fuel Cell Gas Tank Remote Raise Filling Kit Inner Diameter:1-1/2" Surface Finish:Powder Coated Turning Degree:45 Color:Blue UPC:Does Not Apply

Fuel Cells for Sale

Victor Muller dusts off the Spyker D8 Peking-Paris

Wed, 18 Apr 2012

Spyker D8 Peking-Paris Victor Muller is back trying to grab more investors with plans to put the Spyker D8 Peking-Paris in to production. Again. Just when we thought the demise of Saab would see Victor Muller buy a pipe and slippers and retire to Switzerland to contemplate his motoring adventures in to his dotage, CPP goes bust after Vlad the Investor went slightly overdrawn and Victor snatches Spyker back from its UK sojourn as a platform for more grandiose plans.

Bentley Continental V8 S (2013) at Frankfurt motor show

Tue, 03 Sep 2013

This is the new Bentley Continental V8 S, set to be unveiled at the 2013 Frankfurt motor show. It’s the Bentley for buyers who don’t want (or can’t afford) the most potent W12 models, but don’t fancy an ‘entry level’ version of the V8 either. It’s got 521bhp, 502lb ft, and will hit 60mph in less than five seconds.

Video: Jaguar's Julian Thomson on the importance of design values

Tue, 30 Oct 2012

Jaguar's Head of Advanced Design, Julian Thomson, appeared at this month's PSFK Conference in London giving a talk on design values. Thomson's talk, ‘Concepting Dreams, Making Reality Happen', dealt with questions of creating a design story as well as how Jaguar uses the value of its heritage while keeping things original and new. Thomson – the man behind the 2010 C-X75 and the recently revealed F-Type – said, "You can't get a good design story if you don't look at your heritage, where you came from, where your values came from." He went on to discuss the ‘sad years of Jaguar', from around 1968 to 2004 where Jaguar was too timid to develop and "essentially made the same-looking car." He put this down to a reluctance on Jaguar's part to move too far away from its successful models and, quite interestingly, because "not only did we start doing market research, we started asking Americans what they wanted." Watch the full video on the left.