Triumph T120 Swing Arm, Tr6, Tr6c, Thru 1970, Bonneville, 56 on 2040-parts.com
Townsend, Delaware, US
Antique, Vintage, Historic for Sale
- Harley panhead regulator support bracket duo glide original oem 1958-64 (US $39.00)
- Harley hummer kicker gear & spring original oem 1953-up (US $29.00)
- Bmw /5 /6 front fork, nice condition, r50, r60, r75, 55(US $9.95)
- Harley knucklehead panhead ignition switch original oem (US $49.00)
- Harley knucklehead panhead horn button w/wires original oem (US $19.95)
- Vintage triumph 650 pre-unit triumph 500 parts lot chopper bobber (US $17.99)
Jaguar to reveal first Jaguar Special Operations car at Goodwood Festival of Speed
Fri, 20 Jun 2014A new Jaguar Special Operation car is heading for Goodwood (Jaguar Project 7 pictured) It’s not just the new high performance Range Rover Sport from JLR’s Special Operations division that’s arriving at the Goodwood Festival of Speed next week, we’re also getting a new Special Operations car from Jaguar. It’s exactly a year since the Jaguar Project 7 F-Type (pictured above) was revealed at Goodwood as a precursor to the sort of cars JLR has in mind for its new Special Operation division, and now we’re getting the first fruits of the new division for Jaguar at Goodwood this year, although Jaguar aren’t yet letting on what it will be. Could it be a short-run, high-price production version of the Project 7 car, or will it be something else?
AT&T Labs and Carnegie Mellon develop GPS-enabled haptic steering wheel
Fri, 30 Mar 2012AT&T Labs and Carnegie Mellon University have developed a new GPS-enabled steering wheel prototype that incporporates haptic technology. For those who need a quick refresher, haptic technology is a feedback system that uses vibrations to provide alerts, for example vibrating mobile 'phones or your games console controller. Here the tech is used to alert drivers when navigation maneuvers are approaching, with the steering wheel syncing with GPS-enabled computer systems.
The 1980s classic cars that could become MOT-free
Tue, 26 Aug 2014A change of law in 2012 meant that cars registered before 1960 no longer have to pass the yearly test for roadworthiness known as the MOT. However, a new EU directive means that, from 2018, this could be extended to all cars more than 30 years old, as long as they haven’t been substantially modified. Click on to read more about cars over 30-years-old becoming MOT exempt