Toyota Mark X 2006 Rear Left Upper Arm [7151850] on 2040-parts.com
Minato-ku, Tokyo, Japan
Control Arms & Parts for Sale
Daihatsu mira 2001 front right lower arm [8751720](US $419.00)
Suspension control arm & ball joint assembly fits 2002-2005 mitsubishi(US $136.73)
Toyota ist 2002 front left lower arm [1151740](US $439.00)
2000 ferrari 550 maranello rh front steering spindle knuckle oem(US $349.99)
2000 ferrari 550 maranello lh front steering spindle knuckle oem(US $349.99)
Honda life 1997 front left lower arm [5051740](US $429.00)
Britain becomes the engine room of Europe
Thu, 26 Jun 2008By Nigel Wonnacott Motor Industry 26 June 2008 13:59 Britain makes twice as many engines each year as cars. Latest industry figures reveal more than 3.1 million petrol and diesel engines were produced at domestic plants in 2007, compared to just over 1.5 million cars. Output has soared recently, with more than half a million more engines leaving production lines in the last two years.
CAR meets Porsche’s 2014 Le Mans chief
Wed, 11 Dec 2013By Ben Pulman First Official Pictures 11 December 2013 14:50 Porsche is returning to Le Mans in 2014 for the first time since 1998 with an all-new LMP1 prototype, and with ex-Red Bull Racing Formula One driver Mark Webber as its star driver. Audi has dominated Le Mans for the past decade, but new-for-2014 rules allow for any engine size and configuration, and instead focus on energy consumption per lap. With the slate wiped clean, 2014 will be Porsche’s best chance to beat its fellow VW Group member, and the strong Toyota team.
New Hyundai Test Centre at the Nurburgring revealed
Sun, 02 Jun 2013Hyundai’s new test centre at the Nurburgring If anyone had said, just a few years ago, that Hyundai would develop a test centre at the Nurburgring to help shake-down their cars, they’d have been laughed at. But Hyundai – and Kia – have come so far in recent years that it makes absolute sense for them to develop a full-time testing facility at the Nurburgring to test their cars for the road, along with just about every other car maker of note. James May may object to the Nurburgring factor in the suspension set-ups of many road cars (and we do have some sympathy for his point of view), but the sometimes extreme nature of the Nurburgring’s surfaces – and its endless twists and turns, uphill and down – do offer car makers an easily accessible place to test cars in the (almost) real world.