Sports Parts Inc Suspension Spring - Sm-04352r on 2040-parts.com
Indiana, US, United States
Shocks & Suspension for Sale
- Spi arctic cat m 8000 ltd (2016-2017) snowmobile lower a-arm right(US $83.98)
- Sp1 su-08009 ski gas shock(US $52.42)
- 1997 polaris 600 xlt triple indy clutch access trim hole plug cover coolant cap(US $10.00)
- 1997 polaris 600 xlt triple indy cdi box ecu unit module ignition igniter(US $88.00)
- 1997 polaris 600 xlt triple indy oem brake caliper w pads brakes sensor(US $29.00)
- For arctic cat bearcat 440 550 7000 cfr motor snowmobile short spring slide 2pcs(US $15.03)
One Lap of the Web: made in West Germany...with pride!
Wed, 26 Feb 2014-- Out of all the viral social media trends that 24-hour news agencies love to fret over, easily the best is #burnoutnomination -- where you do a burnout and tag an unwitting victim, whereupon they have to perform it in 24 hours or face copious shame and embarrassment. Porsche racer and director Jeff Zwart was recently tasked with burnout duty. Never one to shy away from The Awesome, he recorded a fantastic burnout in his Porsche 914/6.
New Mexican Supercar company to launch VUHL 05 at Goodwood FoS
Tue, 12 Mar 2013A new track-focused, road-legal supercar from Mexican manufacturer Vuhl – the VUHL o5 – will launch at the Goodwood Festival of Speed. Supercar companies spring up all over the place with men in sheds thinking they can take on established supercar makers and take a part of the supercar market in the process. Most fail to get beyond CAD renderings of their dream, but a new Supercar company from Mexico – Vuhl – has the help of established automotive industry names like Ford and Magna Steyr, and they’re promising to reveal their new car – the VUHL 05 – at this year’s Goodwood Festival of Speed in July.
Obama vows to help rebuild industry to compete, win
Wed, 25 Feb 2009President Barack Obama on Tuesday vowed to hold U.S. automakers accountable for "bad practices" but promised to help create a "retooled, re-imagined auto industry." In remarks to a joint session of Congress, Obama gave a sobering assessment of the nation's ills--mainly economic--but said: "We will rebuild, we will recover, and the United States of America will emerge stronger than before." About midway through the speech, the president said: "As for our auto industry, everyone recognizes that years of bad decision-making and a global recession have pushed our automakers to the brink. We should not, and will not, protect them from their own bad practices.