Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Sticker Decals Shark Sharks Funny Smile Cartoon Jaws Ocean Pacific 0500 Ag79f on 2040-parts.com

US $0.99
Location:

Piraeus, default, GR

Piraeus, default, GR
Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Item must be returned within:14 Days Refund will be given as:Money Back Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Return policy details:RETURNS ACCEPTED ONLY IF WE ARE RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY POSSIBLE MISTAKE Restocking Fee:No Placement on Vehicle:Array Product Type:Printed Vinyl Quality:5-7 years cast vinyl use for:indoor outdoor use Apply to:Applies to any smooth surface Resistance:UV, Abrasion & Water Resistant

Ferrari LaFerrari lands in China: Shanghai Motor Show

Wed, 24 Apr 2013

Ferrari’s hybrid supercar was as eagerly received as it was in Geneva, with a sea of photographers, press and visitors thronging to get a glimpse of what is undeniably an impressive ‘F70′ from Ferrari. But looking good is perhaps the second ‘must have’ for a supercar – especially one that replaces the Enzo – and LaFerrari looks to deliver on the number one priority for most supercar buyers - performance. With 798bhp from its naturally aspirated V12 and an extra 161bhp from its electric motor, LaFerrari promises a dose of green credentials – important, to a degree, on China’s polluted roads – to go with its performance and handling, performance that can see the car it get to 62mph in under 3 seconds and on to a 186mph in an even more impressive 15.5 seconds.

RAC Foundation – Road charging is inevitable

Tue, 06 Jul 2010

The RAC Foundation calls for Road Charging. According to RAC Foundation Director Stephen Glaister, a predicted 33% increase in traffic by 2025 and a reduction in road building schemes and cuts in general make a  pay as you go system the answer to congested roads. All of which is fine and dandy – it gives the RAC Foundation something to do and gets them a bit of PR – but it”s hardly joined-up thinking.

Toyota outlines quality reforms; chief bows out of U.S. hearings

Wed, 17 Feb 2010

Conceding that breakneck expansion led to Toyota Motor Corp.'s current recall crisis, president Akio Toyoda outlined reforms meant to get quality back on track, including more active use of the car's so-called black box crash data recorder. Toyoda, grandson of the carmaker's founder, also indicated he won't sit before Congressional hearings into the quality lapses that have triggered recalls of more than 8.5 million vehicles since last fall. Yoshimi Inaba, the head of Toyota's U.S.