Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Suzuki Rmz 450 N-style Accelerator Team Graphics Kit With Seat Cover on 2040-parts.com

US $30.00
Location:

Billings, Montana, US

Billings, Montana, US
Returns Accepted:ReturnsNotAccepted Part Brand:N-Style Manufacturer Part Number:N40-4403

 Up for auction: New N-Style Accelerator Team Kit with graphics and gripper seat cover. Will fit 2008-2013 Suzuki RMZ 450. 

Liberal Petrolhead. Oxymoron? Not any more

Wed, 25 Aug 2010

Vince Cable gets behind the wheel of an Aston Martin DBS With the Liberal / Conservative coalition now in charge we seem to have got a Government where a big chunk of the ministers are Liberals (is there a Liberal MP without a portfolio of some description?). Which I suppose is the price we pay for allowing the Conservatives to become Labour Lite instead of having real conviction politicians. Still, it throws up some interesting conflicts.

McLaren MP4-12C: The build begins +video

Wed, 02 Feb 2011

First McLaren MP4-12C being built You could be forgiven for thinking that McLaren had already started building their Ferrari 458 challenging car – the McLaren MP4-12C. After all, it’s been turning up all over the place for at least a year, and we even had a good view of the Volcano Orange MP4-12C from Goodwood as it passed us en-route to strut its stuff up the Goodwood Hillclimb last year. But the cars we’ve seen so far – even the Volcano Orange MP4-12C from Goodwood – were prototypes; McLaren’s running test beds for tweaking and refining the MP4-12C before theĀ firstĀ cars reach customers this year.

Video: The making of Forza Motorsport 4

Wed, 22 Feb 2012

Turn 10, the studio behind the design of Forza Motorsport 4 video game, has produced a video to revealed the lengthy process behind the creation of each car in their virtual pit garage. The video describes each, painstaking step from sourcing of the cars that will feature in the game to the development of the sound of each car. Some cars are scanned using equipment which gives accurate readings to 1/12,000 inch (around 0.002mm) is used to capture data that's imported into software used by anyone familiar with a design studio.