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Triumph Cylinder Head Pre Unit 650 Motorcycle Engine -62 Aluminum Bonneville on 2040-parts.com

US $99.99
Location:

Cranberry Township, Pennsylvania, US

Cranberry Township, Pennsylvania, US
Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Refund will be given as:Money back or exchange (buyer's choice) Item must be returned within:14 Days Return policy details:Returns due to mistakes, not deemed to be our fault, are subject to a 20% restocking fee and postage is not refundable. No returns on installed parts or items not in their original packaging. Items that are lost or received damaged will be replaced, AFTER insurance claim and payment has been verified (no refunds). Please Contact Cycle Warehouse BEFORE returning parts to receive an RMA#. Items returned without an RMA# will be refused. Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Restocking Fee:No

One Lap of the Web: Scary Almost-Halloween Edition

Wed, 30 Oct 2013

-- Just in time for Halloween, here's project car as scary as it is inexplicable. A 1988 Lamborghini Countach, actually made by Lamborghini of Italy in 1988 (at the Lamborghini factory) has been neglected like the Trans Am that's been sitting in your uncle's shed since the Carter administration. We're pretty sure there's a scary story about how this Countach ended up this way, but we're not sure we want to hear it -- it'll be too depressing.

Slump in new car sales is worst since February 2006

Mon, 07 Jul 2008

By Nigel Wonnacot Motor Industry 07 July 2008 12:42 It’s finally happened. The new car market has succumbed to the economic slowdown and punters are staying away from showrooms in droves. Latest figures from industry trade body SMMT showed an 11.9 per cent fall in private sales in June to 83,425 cars.

The Leko – a new car from IKEA? – Not a chance!

Tue, 24 Mar 2009

A new site claims IKEA is about to launch a car - on the 1st April! [ad#ad-1] The latest silly site to go (semi) viral online this week purports to be teasing a new car from IKEA, that hell of  a flat-pack, windowless, clockless shopping experience where the only instructions you get for assembling your insane purchase are a set of pictures on a big sheet of paper, that seemingly have no resemblance to the contents of the package you’ve been stupefied in to buying. Now on the face of it this is perhaps plausible.