Raptor 660r Front Wheels And Tires Fit 660 700 350 Banshee Yfz450 Warrior 250 on 2040-parts.com
Ray, Michigan, United States
Wheels, Tires for Sale
- Yamaha raptor 660r rear wheel rim tire fit 660, 700, banshee, 350, yzf450 250(US $69.99)
- Yamaha honda polaris kawasaki atv utv moose wheel spacers mud6512(US $58.78)
- Selling disc for atv. bad dawg ground hog disc and chisel plow.(US $260.00)
- 4 new genuine honda oem rubicon 500 & rincon 650 680 rear wheel studs lug bolts(US $12.75)
- Suzuki lt160 rear brake lever pedal pivot assembly quad runner lt-f160 oem 1991(US $24.95)
- Goldspeed sx front tires 20 6 10 trx450 yfz450 ltr450 drr jb wash mini mod in24(US $105.00)
Toyota's hybrid sales top one million
Fri, 08 Jun 2007By Jack Carfrae Motor Industry 08 June 2007 12:16 Toyota, and its luxury arm Lexus, have notched up more than a million hybrid sales for the first time. First launched in Japan in 1997, the Prius has racked-up 758,000 sales internationally, 13,826 of them in the UK. And a third of the 1,047,000 hybrids built by Toyota found homes in its domestic Japanese market.
CDN and Opel/Vauxhall Interactive Design Competition Update
Mon, 08 Nov 2010Seats, relationships, city life, the virtual world and new materials exploration: one month into the Car Design News-Opel/Vauxhall interactive design competition, launched on 11 October, these are a few of the themes student designers are exploring, in answer to the question 'What do you think is our lounge style?'. The competition, a collaboration between Opel-Vauxhall and Car Design News, is an interactive design competition for students who are studying design – of any discipline – at a college in Europe. The winner of the competition will work as a paid intern at Opel/Vauxhall design center in Rüsselsheim.
Lamborghini LP650-4 Roadster – the paint job +video
Sat, 30 Jan 2010The Lamborghini LP650-4 Roadster - the default paint job So far we’ve only seen one Lamborghini LP650-4 Roadster in the wild. And that was one of Lamborghini’s own cars in the States. But that’s hardly surprising – they’re only just starting to make their way in to customer hands.