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Warn 87355 Plow Mount Kit on 2040-parts.com

US $106.40
Location:

San Diego, California, United States

San Diego, California, United States
Condition:New Brand:Warn Surface Finish:Brand New Manufacturer Part Number:87355 Warranty:No Interchange Part Number:Warn 87355 Snow Plow Mount Country/Region of Manufacture:United States Other Part Number:WARN 87355 Seller SKU:BCSQ87355

Evanta Barchetta gets revealed at Goodwood Revival

Sat, 13 Sep 2014

Evanta Barchetta gets revealed at Goodwood Revival There’s definitely an appetite for properly built, low-run retro sports cars – from proper roadsters to GTs like the David Brown’s Speedback – so the arrival of the Evanta Barchetta at the Goodwood Revival, looking like a properly sorted (and built) retro-styled Roadster, should be greeted with enthusiasm, rather than moans about ‘Garden Shed’ cars. That’s because the Evanta Barchetta is the result of a collaboration between Afzil Kahn – he of Bradford’s Kahn Design – and Evanta’s Ant Anstead, with low volume experience and expertise coming from Ant’s Evanta and design and engineering from Kahn. So it should be properly sorted.

BMW M3 coupe stripped down to go club racing

Wed, 04 Nov 2009

BMW's M division is back in the business of building specialty street-legal race cars with a new lightweight version of the M3 called the GTS. The lightweight coupe, set to go on sale in early 2010 at a yet-undisclosed price, was conceived as a limited-edition model primarily for club-based racing in much the same way that Porsche builds the 911 GT3 Clubsport. But in a clear effort to link its track-based activities with the production-car side of its business, BMW's M division is offering the new car with a homologation package that will allow customers to register the M3 GTS for street use.

Cadillac ELR recall targets stability control software issues

Mon, 31 Mar 2014

The 2014 Cadillac ELR is being recalled for an issue with its electronic stability control (ESC) system. According to NHTSA, the software for the car's electronic stability control system may inhibit certain ESC functions, and fail to alert the driver than ESC is partially or fully disabled. This could potentially give the driver no warning that ESC may be off entirely, which could result in a loss of control, increasing the risk of a crash.