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Suzuki Tl 1000 R 1998-2001 2000 Fairing Seat Right Side Cover Right- on 2040-parts.com

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Condition:Used Produktgruppe:Karosserieteile Einbauposition:Rechts Anzahl pro Packung:1 Zollgröße:1998" Marke:Suzuki Hersteller:Suzuki Modell:TL 1000 R 1998-2001 Produkttyp:VERKLEIDUNG SITZ RECHTS Produktart:VERKLEIDUNG SITZ RECHTS Im Lieferumfang enthalten:VERKLEIDUNG SITZ RECHTS Herstellernummer:000000033406 OE/OEM Referenznummer(n):000000033406 EAN:Does not apply

Fairings & Body Work for Sale

Koenigsegg planning an entry-level car – but it’ll still cost £500k

Sat, 26 Apr 2014

Koenigsegg are planning an entry-level car at half the price of the Agera R (pictured) Think of the cars that Christian von Koenigsegg has made since he started with the CC8S in 2002 and you think of them as extremes of the supercar genre; the Swedish engineering take on the bloated and massively complex Bugatti Veyron. Christian’s men in a shed in Sweden have gone on to make a series of progressively quicker and more impressive supercars, through the CCR, CCX and the Agera and on to the current most extreme iteration – the Koenigsegg One:1. But it looks like Christian has decided that his ambition to create the world’s greatest hypercar leaves room for a ‘Lesser’ Koenigsegg, a car that still has innovative engineering and extreme performance but comes at a lower price.

New Car Sales Accelerating Ahead

Fri, 06 Dec 2013

IT’S GOOD news in the new car market as the latest figures from industry body the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders (SMMT) reveal registrations already outstripping those of 2012 with one month of the year still to go. A total of 159,581 new cars were registered in November - a 7% rise on the figure for November 2012. Last month's figures took the year-so-far total to 2,111,819 - a 9.9% rise on the January-November 2012 total and already in excess of the year-end 2012 figure of 2.04 million.

“Where is the sustainable vehicle design?”

Wed, 28 Apr 2010

The notion of a 'new paradigm in car design' was a theme running through talks by five panelists at London's Royal College of Art last week, who debated "Seriously now, where is the sustainable vehicle design?" Despite disparate backgrounds, there was broad agreement that a truly sustainable form of personal transportation is unlikely to come from an established automotive firm any time soon. Panelist Rob Holdway of Giraffe Innovation was most vocal in his approach to the subject, saying "Frankly, I think the car is unacceptable - we hear a lot about the sustainable car, but I don't think there is such a thing as a sustainable car". The audience - made up mainly of RCA students - also heard from Nico Sergent of Riversimple about how the company's seven-point business model, and its open source strategy, incentivized the company to build a truly sustainable car and mobility package that the current auto model simply doesn't allow.