Stickers Hks Racing Turbo Exhaust Intake Honda Civic Supra B16 B18 H22 H23 Dohc on 2040-parts.com
Kailua Kona, Hawaii, US
Other Decals for Sale
- New murray pontiac fire truck 1949-50 graphic(US $18.99)
- New murray tooth grille charger 1968-70 graphic(US $37.99)
- (2) student drivers - magnetic sign 12in x 24in.(US $30.00)
- New 3d set kit silver gas tank metal sticker fit kawasaki zx-14r ninja monster(US $39.99)
- "off road edition" decal set for jeep wrangler(US $9.95)
- New oem dodge ram pickup truck 8 1/8 x 8 3/4 inch ram head decal!(US $14.99)
Pagani Zonda F Cinque – er, no it’s not!
Fri, 06 Mar 2009The mysterious 'Zonda F Cinque' - which is actually a Regular Zonda Cinque But we are still to see the Zonda Cinque (which is essentially a tamed-down Zonda R for the road) in the wild, and probably because of that the car sites around the world were full of a mysterious ‘Zonda F Cinque’ that was going to turn up at the Geneva Motor Show. But we had our doubts. We have pretty good contacts at Pagani, and although we knew that the Pagani coming to Geneva was in fact the Cinque (as well as the Zonda R) we wanted to work out where the rumour came from.
Porsche Macan 2.0 litre 4-cylinder coming to the UK – but not Europe
Fri, 02 May 2014The Porsche Macan 2.0 litre Turbo will be available in the UK Porsche quietly revealed their first car with a 4-cylinder engine in almost a generation at the Beijing Motor Show last month with the arrival of the Porsche Macan 2.0 litre turbo, produced to mop up sale in China. China’s tax system mitigates against thirstier, bigger-engined cars, so a 2.0 litre turbo attracts tax at less than half the rate of the 3.0 litre V6 in the Macan S, so it will be the big volume model for China. But the demand from China for the 2.0 litre Macan means Porsche won’t have the capacity to build it for other left hand drive markets, so Europe won’t be getting the little-engined Macan.
rusEFI: Open-source homebuilt fuel-injection set to rival Megasquirt
Thu, 24 Apr 2014Electronic fuel-delivery and ignition controls have given us a new golden age of engine efficiency and performance. Most of us would never go back to the dark ages—say, before 1990—when you could still buy new vehicles with carburetors and clunky distributors. From the point of view of those of us who like to modify our cars, however, the black-box nature of engine-control computers limits our options for making changes to how our fuel-delivery and ignition systems function.