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Spectre Professional Quality Fasteners - Chevy Torque Conv. Kit Th350/400 New on 2040-parts.com

US $4.95
Location:

Holtsville, New York, US

Holtsville, New York, US
Item must be returned within:14 Days Refund will be given as:Money Back Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Restocking Fee:No Return policy details: Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Brand:Spectre Performance Manufacturer Part Number:4697 Warranty:Yes

Spectre Professional Quality Fasteners  Chevy Torque Convertor bolt  Kit - GM TH350/400 - NEW

German custom shop creates vinyl wrap celebrating Ayrton Senna

Tue, 01 May 2012

It was 18 years ago on May 1 that Ayrton Senna crashed his Williams Formula One car and died during the San Marino Grand Prix. German customizer Cam Shaft is celebrating the man on the anniversary of his demise with a new vinyl wrap for an old Lotus Esprit. Senna drove for the Lotus team from 1985 to 1987 in the notable black-and-gold John Player Special Lotus 97T.

Public supports 20mph urban speed limits

Wed, 02 Apr 2014

78% of people think 20mph speed limits should be introduced as the norm in residential areas, around schools and in town centres, according to road safety charity Brake. It comes as the charity introduces its GO 20 campaign, calling on politicians to support changing the default urban speed limit to 20mph. Backlash at increase in 20mph areas predicted On Bing: see pictures of 20mph zones 20mph zones are already widespread in some areas – with Brake claiming these areas have seen significant reductions in crashes.

This could be your first autonomous vehicle

Thu, 09 Jan 2014

While Google's autonomous fleet of robot cars prowls Silicon Valley and gets all the press, the first, or one of the first, truly autonomous vehicles you may ride in could be something like this: The humble, people-moving Navia. Developed by a French company called Induct, the Navia is ringed with laser beams (not frickin' laser beams. Ed.) that help it navigate through city streets or college campuses without the aid of a track in the ground, a rail or even GPS (GPS is not accurate enough, Induct says).