Wehrs Machine Wm750t11 Suspension Tube on 2040-parts.com
Cedar City, Utah, United States
Modifieds for Sale
- Wehrs machine wm750t13(US $19.00)
- Wehrs machine wm625t13 suspension tube(US $19.00)
- Howe upper ball joint screw in with .500in longer stud k772 22320sv(US $107.95)
- Wehrs machine wm625t14b 14” suspension tube bent(US $20.00)
- Air cleaner kit 14x4 with 5/16 stud / nut / wrap silver kit washable element(US $159.95)
- Air cleaner kit 14x4 with 5/16 stud / nut / wrap silver kit paper element(US $142.95)
Keep Cruisin', Marv Spector
Thu, 08 May 2014For the last 30 years or so, you could belly up to the service counter at Specter Off Road in scorching Chatsworth, Calif., deep in the Valley, underneath the red-and-white arrow that stretches the length of the squat stucco building. You'd first have to stroll past the long and dark row of dizzying Toyota Land Cruisers -- Japanese fire trucks, FJ60s with roof-mounted machine guns and a propane-powered 1973 Baja 1000 champion. Past the glass cases of old photos and model kits and RC cars from Japan.
Tomorrow’s safety equipment
Mon, 18 Jun 2007By Tim Pollard Motor Industry 18 June 2007 08:48 The next generation of safety systems will take even more control away from the driver, read road signs – and even slam the brakes on for you in an emergency stop. Forget science fiction, this is science fact. CAR Online is reporting from Bosch’s annual technology seminar all week – and we’ve had the lowdown from the world’s biggest components supplier on what safety innovations are around the corner.
Honda Civic Tourer 1.6 i-DTEC wins MPG Marathon
Wed, 15 Oct 2014The winners of the MPG Marathon in the Honda Civic Tourer 1.6 i-DTEC Last year Honda took the CR-V 1.6i-DTEC out MPG Marathon playing, and managed to return an impressive 78mpg in a car the official figures say should do 63mpg, disproving (to a point) that cars just can’t achieve official economy figures in the real world. This time it’s the turn of the new Honda Civic Tourer with the latest 1.6 i-DTEC ‘Earth Dreams’ engine to go out and eke every possible inch of tarmac from every single drop of petrol. In the hands of Honda R&D engineers Fergal McGrath, James Warren, Tony Shiggins and Julian Warren, the Civic Tourer drove a total of 330 miles and managed to do 97.2mpg – an impressive 31.8 per cent more than the official average.