Titan Mrl-6000 Mid Rise Scissor Auto Lift 6000 Lb Car Hoist 110v on 2040-parts.com
Greenwood, Indiana, US
Lifts / Hoists / Jacks for Sale
New titan 15,000 lb. 2-post symmetric clearfloor auto lift hoist 220v(US $2,999.99)
Hydraulic/air jack(US $150.00)
Ben pearson model 9000-s two post lift(US $1,650.00)
Torin 6-ton fast lift bottle jack w/wrench #t906lrk(US $49.99)
Vintage auto specialties co.1950's 1960's bipod bumper jack with crank handle(US $179.99)
Car jack aluminum racing style speed jack lightweight 3000 lb capacity lift new(US $124.98)
Aston Martin V8 Vantage S: The Video
Fri, 11 Mar 2011Aston Martin V8 Vantage S on track at the Ascari Circuit in Spain We’re always up for a bit of Aston Martin goodness, so we were more than happy to report in January that Aston Martin has added a bit of extra oomph to the V8 to create the Aston Martin V8 Vantage S. To be honest, there’s not a huge amount of extra power on the Vantage V8 S – just 10bhp – but there are a chunk of tweaks that make it very appealing, including a new seven speed Sportshift ‘box, sharper steering, better braking and a bit of suspension tweaking to make the V8S that bit more aggressive. All this new V8 S goodness was served up at the Geneva Motor Show last week, but we got a bit sidetracked with the new Aston Martin Virage – or DB9 Ghia – in a marmite shade of orange hogging AM’s Geneva stand.
Going, going, gone: Ford sells Volvo to Geely
Mon, 02 Aug 2010Little more than a year ago, the name Geely would happily slip under the radar of most. Today, the Chinese company completed its purchase of Volvo from Ford. Geely stumped up a $1.3 billion in cash for the Swedish brand and issued a $200m note.
'Crash for cash' scams soar by 51%
Wed, 18 Jun 2014THE NUMBER of "crash for cash" car insurance scams uncovered by a major insurer surged by 51% annually last year. Aviva said it had detected around 820 staged accidents in 2013, leading to some 2,200 fraudulent personal injury claims. It is pressing for tougher penalties and said that often, rather than being locked up, fraudsters end up being sentenced to community orders, which "do little" to deter them from re-offending.