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Wagner Qc805 Brake Pad Or Shoe, Front-thermoquiet Brake Pad on 2040-parts.com

US $62.28
Location:

Decatur, Texas, US

Decatur, Texas, US
Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Refund will be given as:Money Back Item must be returned within:14 Days Return policy details:ALL RETURN PARTS MUST BE IN ORIGINAL PACKAGING AND SALEABLE CONDITION. Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Restocking Fee:No Part Brand:WAGNER Manufacturer Part Number:QC805 SME:_2316 Placement on Vehicle:Front

Electric cars get a £500 million government cash boost – but will it get spent?

Mon, 05 May 2014

The new BMW i3 EV (pictured) will be subsidised until 2017. The subsidy of up to £5000 paid to buyers of electric cars has been with us for three years, but it hasn’t had much impact on EV sales and it did look like the government had decided to scrap it all together. But it looks like the coalition has allowed Nick Clegg to have his way with EV subsides in a move that will see £500 million injected in to promoting and supporting electric cars in the UK in the next few years.

Bentley Continental Supersports hits 205 mph on ice

Tue, 15 Feb 2011

WITH VIDEO -- So why wouldn't you do this? Take a six-figure British luxury car and a four-time World Rally champ, then race the car on ice to a top speed of 205.48 mph. That's a world record.

Art Center Car Classic features the world's great automobiles

Tue, 29 Oct 2013

It seems like we say this every year, but this year it's truly fitting: this was the best Art Center Car Classic ever. Consider that the show covered both ends of the Corvette spectrum, from Peter Brock and the rise of the original “Mitchell Corvette” -- which was right there parked on the grass -- to General Motors designer Pete Thomas and the new C7 parked not far away, with the Mako Shark and the '63 split-window Sting Ray lined up between. A couple car lengths from that was the debut of the finally finished Peter Mullin Bugatti Type 64, a spectacular re-imagining of Jean Bugatti's unfinished final car done by Art Center students and Transportation Design chair Stewart Reed.