Other Apparel & Merchandise for Sale
- Scott youth 89si goggle (green) 217800-0006041(US $22.46)
- Scott youth 89si goggle (blue) 217800-0003041(US $22.46)
- Scott youth 89si goggle (pink) 217800-0026041(US $22.46)
- Scott split otg goggle (black) 227385-0001041(US $49.46)
- Scott hustle goggle (vinyl red/blue) 217782-3610041(US $58.46)
- Dragon mdx goggle coal w/jet polarized lens 722-1377(US $82.76)
UK Car Sales up again in October 2012
Wed, 07 Nov 2012New car registrations rose in October by 12.1 per cent in the UK, the ninth month of 2012 to see rising car sales. The European car market may be in a real mess with carnage looming for production facilities run by mainstream car makers, but the UK continues to grow its new car market with sales in October up by 12.1 per cent. Total new car registrations (which includes pre-reg) rose to 151,252 units, the ninth monthly increase of 2012, and the SMMT are now predicting total sales for 2012 of over 2 million, back to 2010 levels after a fall in 2011 to below the 2 million mark.
Renault Twingo CC confirmed for 2010
Tue, 28 Apr 2009The Renault Twingo CC - in showrooms by Spring 2010 Little cabriolets are flavour of the month/year. The MINI Cabriolet has been a big seller, and the Fiat 500C is a great little car. So, after years of procrastination, Renault has finally confirmed that the concept Renault Twingo CC, first seen at Geneva in 2007, will make it in to production in 2010.
Back to basics for VW, says Walter de Silva
Wed, 25 Jun 2008By Adam Towler Motor Industry 25 June 2008 13:01 It was an odd place for an inside line into what future Volkswagens will look like, but when head of VW Group design Walter de Silva invited CAR to the old Fiat Lingotto factory in Turin - now a conference and shopping centre – we could hardly say no. De Silva described VW as being immersed in a 'process of defining their design language' which could be read as ‘we’re still sucking our designer thumbs to see what happens’. Audi, De Silva said, had already been through that process and its design DNA was ‘understood by everyone in the company, right down to the smallest details'.