Romaine Electric 5746n-g Starter Motor 12 V, Counter Clockwise, 16 Tooth on 2040-parts.com
Starters for Sale
- Romaine electric 5789n-usa starter motor 12 v, counter clockwise, 10 tooth(US $341.90)
- 17825 new starter toyota camry avalon highlander sienna rav4 solara venza es350(US $49.99)
- Ford galaxy starter s114875 09a911023 2.80 petrol 118kw 2001 22250685-(US $)
- Renault laguna ii bg0/1 starter 820075362 d7r49 1.90 diesel 88kw 2002 22250686-(US $)
- Starter motor for 2005-2007 cadillac cts 2.8l 2006-2011 cadillac sts 3.6l new(US $49.99)
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Ferrari 599 Hybrid – it’s a very ‘Green’ Ferrari
Sat, 27 Feb 2010The very green Ferrari 599 Hybrid at Geneva To a die-hard petrol head, Ferrari lover or frankly anyone with a proper sense of right and wrong, the idea of a ‘Green’ Ferrari is anathema. Fortunately, although I suppose you could consider the Ferrari 599 Hybrid ‘Green’ in the sense that it will probably produce less CO2 (which is, of course, the single most important thing for Ferrari), the performance of this 599 Hybrid is going to be its forte, and the real green bit on this particular 599 Hybrid is the hideous paint job. We’ve known for a while that Ferrari were working on a Hybrid, and we recently revealed it would be a hybrid version of the Ferrari 599.
Daimler, Ford, Nissan team up on fuel cells
Mon, 28 Jan 2013Ford Motor Co., Nissan Motor Co. and Mercedes-Benz parent company Daimler AG have formed a partnership aimed at speeding up the commercialization of fuel cell electric vehicle technology. Together, the automakers plan to develop a common fuel cell stack and fuel cell system to be used in what they describe as "highly differentiated, separately branded fuel cell electric vehicles" as early as 2017.
Is the DfT trying to nobble 80mph speed limit trials?
Wed, 31 Oct 2012With trials proposed for an 80mph speed limit, the ABD are asking if the DfT are trying to fix the trials by running them on congested motorways. When the ConDems came to power, and Philip Hammond was made Transport Secretary, we did hope that might be a sign that government policy on cars would finally make sense, especially when Philip Hammond declared ‘The war on motorists is over‘. Philip’s aim was to look at stuff like national speed limits and create a system that made sense, rather than the silly situation we have where everyone knows you won’t get nicked for 85mph on a motorway unless plod got out of bed the wrong side.