Exhaust Pipes & Tips for Sale
- Walker exhaust 47572 exhaust pipe-exhaust intermediate pipe(US $47.84)
- Walker exhaust 44684 exhaust pipe-exhaust tail pipe(US $35.87)
- Walker exhaust 45873 exhaust pipe-exhaust intermediate pipe(US $36.37)
- Walker products 45520 extension pipe(US $38.92)
- Walker exhaust 43978 exhaust pipe-exhaust intermediate pipe(US $28.46)
- Walker exhaust 46694 exhaust pipe-exhaust intermediate pipe(US $42.62)
How will you get to work in the year 2030?
Wed, 08 Oct 2014Imagine a future where New Jersey adopts mass public transit and on-demand jitneys; Boston becomes hyper-dense and walking becomes the primary means of transport; Atlanta disperses even further and relies on solar power, electric cars and Google connected technologies to manage mobility; and Los Angeles tries autonomous cars, but finds the transition difficult, and its gridlock even worse. These are the scenarios proposed in a new study by New York University's Rudin Center for Transport Policy and Management. The report, which proposes scenarios rather than making predictions about the future of transportation in the US, repeatedly points to connected car technologies, autonomous cars and logistics networks as driving forces in regional mobility solutions.
Koenigsegg Agera R claims world speed records
Sat, 03 Sep 2011Koenigsegg Agera R claims world speed records We are constantly amazed at what the three men in a shed in the snow in Sweden that are Koenigsegg Automotive AB can achieve. All the way from the first Koenigsegg, the CC8S, to the very latest, the Koenigsegg Agera we got up close and personal with at Goodwood this year, and it’s bonkers big brother – the Koenigsegg Agera R. From the CC8S to the Agera R, Christian von Koenigsegg has always trod his own, very particular, path to supercar performance.
Porsche Panamera hits the heights in Shanghai
Wed, 22 Apr 2009A Porsche Panamera on its way to the 94th floor of the World Financial Centre in Shanghai [ad#ad-1] The stories of car makers doing daft things with cars to garner a bit of publicity have been rarer of late. Which, considering the sombre mood of car makers and the car buying public in recent months, is no real surprise. Even Motor Shows have been relatively sombre affairs (the Detroit Motor Show was particularly muted in 2009), but China is still booming, and the Shanghai Motor Show has been pretty much an old fashioned, glitzy affair.