Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Racecloud Bundle Kits Data System Mychron5 Unipro Kart Crg Birel Praga on 2040-parts.com

US $800.00
Location:

North Salt Lake, Utah, United States

North Salt Lake, Utah, United States
Condition:New

I have two (2x) Race Cloud Bundle Kit's for sale. Retail was originally $1,100 each just last year. I will sell for $800 for one (plus shipping) or $1600 for both (with free shipping). These have never been used. Brand new in box, all documents and paperwork included and manufacturer warranty.

Range Rover Sport SVR takes on the Nurburgring – and wins (video)

Wed, 30 Jul 2014

Range Rover Sport SVR takes on the Nurburgring – and wins (video) We’re not sure at what point a car actually becomes a ‘production’ car, but that’s a tag Land Rover are putting on the new Range Rover Sport SVR as it takes to the Nurburgring and comes away with a time of 8 minutes 14 seconds – the fastest by a production SUV. Land Rover are keen to tell us the lap by the RRS SVR was in a standard production car, by which we assume a car that’s built to the specification announced for the Sport SVR when it arrives next year. That means the full fat 542bhp from its 5.0 litre V8 and performance that is clearly impressive, although Land Rover still hasn’t given us specific performance figures, and certainly enough - together with suspension tweaks – to make it very impressive on road.

Record-setting Ferrari hydroplane heads for RM's Monaco auction

Fri, 17 Feb 2012

A record-setting Ferrari-powered 1953 hydroplane, ARNO XI, will cross the block in May at the RM Auctions event in Monaco. The hydroplane set the speed record for a boat of its size on Lake Iseo in northern Italy, running up to 150.19 mph. Designed and built by Achille Castoldi—a friend of Ferrari Grand Prix drivers Alberto Ascari and Luigi Villoresi—convinced Enzo Ferrari to provide knowledge and technical assistance to help develop the world-record-holding boat.

Auto-safety history gets its place in the Smithsonian

Thu, 15 Jul 2010

Smithsonian museum officials say their new collection of auto-safety objects dating to the 1930s is about America's love affair with its cars. But really it's about our passion for, well, staying alive. While some enthusiasts might question whether their cars should be braking for them, it's hard to quarrel with most of this technology.