Standard Motor Products Pc568 Crank Position Sensor on 2040-parts.com
Yonkers, New York, United States
Electronic Ignition for Sale
- Standard motor products rc51 ignition capacitor(US $21.55)
- Standard motor products pc112 cam position sensor(US $138.49)
- Standard motor products pc72 crank position sensor(US $246.51)
- Standard motor products pc731 crank position sensor(US $53.82)
- Standard motor products lx1000 ignition control module(US $126.01)
- Standard motor products pc761 cam position sensor(US $47.36)
One Lap of the Web: The Greenwich Concours, racecars for the street and exclusivity at Ferrari
Fri, 10 May 2013We spend a lot of time on the Internet -- pretty much whenever we're not driving, writing about or working on cars. Since there's more out there than we'd ever be able to cover, here's our daily digest of car stuff on the Web you may not otherwise have heard about. -- Over at Motor Authority, they're talking about the Audi W
Chief engineer of Ford Focus quits to lead German yacht builder
Mon, 12 Jul 2010Jens Ludmann, chief program engineer for Ford Motor Co.'s new Focus, is quitting the automaker to head a German-based maker of luxury yachts. Ludmann led a team at Ford's European base in Merkenich, near Cologne, Germany, that developed the Focus, the first car from CEO Alan Mulally's global One Ford strategy and flagship of the company's new range of global C-segment products. The German native, who joined Ford in 2000, will become CEO of Bavaria Yachtbau GmbH, effective Aug.
Worth a read: Wired's 'Why Getting It Wrong Is the Future of Design'
Thu, 25 Sep 2014Wired has just published a series of short articles entitled 13 Lessons for Design's New Golden Age. While there are some interesting examples cited in the piece, the concluding article, ‘Why Getting It Wrong Is the Future of Design' by the former creative director of Wired magazine, Scott Dadich, feels like it has particular resonance for car design. Dadich's Wrong Theory uses disruptive examples from the world of art, plus his own experience of working at Wired, to explain how design goes through phases: establishing a direction, creating a set of rules that define that direction and finally someone who dares to break from that direction.