Performance Brake Calipers for Sale
- 2000-2009 honda s2000 wilwood superlite 6r front big brake kit,6 piston,13"(US $2,016.00)
- Wilwood 120-12070 - mc4 series mechanical driver side parking brake caliper(US $177.61)
- Wilwood 120-13551-rd - forged dynalite-m brake caliper for 1.00 rotor(US $273.26)
- Centric front right disc brake caliper 141.66005 for 1987-1991 chevy blazer(US $36.50)
- Wilwood aero6 front big brake kit fits 2015-2018 ford mustang,15"drilled,black(US $2,594.24)
- Wilwood 4 piston superlite brake caliper p/n 120-11128(US $212.17)
Green Car Award Winners – all more polluting than a Porsche 911
Fri, 16 Jul 2010The Porsche 911 Carrera - less polluting than the What Car Green Car Award Winners Earlier today we did a round-up of this year’s What Car Green Car Award winners. Which many find of interest as they believe the right thing to do is buy a car with low CO2 emissions. Regular readers will know that we are not impressed with the obsession with CO2 and want Governments to stop taxing motorists based on the nonsense that CO2 is harmful, and instead base taxation and future objectives for the car industry on what really matters – emissions from cars that are detrimental to health.
2011 Ford Super Duty pickup gets price hike, content upgrade
Fri, 19 Feb 2010Ford Motor Co.'s redesigned 2011 Super Duty pickup will carry a base sticker price higher than its predecessor but will include upgraded content, such as a new six-speed transmission. Ford also will offer its first diesel V8 engine designed in-house. The pickup, which goes on sale this spring, starts at $28,995, according to a dealer and a source familiar with the program.
Government CO2 cock-up
Sun, 03 Jun 2007By Richard Yarrow Motoring Issues 03 June 2007 02:32 Britain’s new eco-motoring scheme postponed Plans to help Britain’s drivers choose the greenest car for their budget have been thrown into chaos, CAR Online can reveal. The launch of a new Government website for motorists – called www.actonco2.co.uk – has been cancelled just 16 hours before it was to go live. Amazingly, the Department for Transport (DfT) has admitted the eleventh hour delay was because it realised the CO2 data to published wasn’t accurate.