Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Yamaha Exciter 220 65b-51333-10-5b Screen Intake Jet Grate on 2040-parts.com

US $50.00
Location:

miami, FL, United States

miami, FL, United States
Condition:Used Manufacturer Part Number:65B-51333-10-5B

Part: 1997 Yamaha Exciter 220 Intake Grate

Description:

  • This part is used, shows signs of normal wear
  • Please review all pictures before purchasing item
  • Ready to install
  • Left side has crack

This part may fit other makes, models, and years but if you have anything other than what this part was removed from it is your responsibility to ensure that it will fit your application. Please take the time to do the research before committing to a purchase. We are unable to accept returns because the item you purchased will not fit.

F1 Korean Grand Prix: Red Bull CGI Video

Sun, 17 Oct 2010

Red Bull treat us to a CGI of the new F1 track in South Korea The F1 Circus gets bigger and bigger every year as Bernie Ecclestone continues his aim to host a Grand Prix in every country that can scrape together a few hundred million to add to the bank of Ecclestone. And one of the newest to succumb to the charms of Bernie and F1 is South Korea. There have been doubts that South Korea would get their act together and have their shiny new F1 facility ready to roll for 24th October (next Sunday), but it looks like the track has been signed off for next week’s race.

Essay: Variable Degrees of Translucency

Mon, 12 Nov 2007

Car door panels and fenders are generally made of steel, sometimes of aluminum or plastic composites, and you can't see through them. Car windows, on the other hand, are made of a transparent sandwich of glass and plastic - and you can see through them. But in the future there will be variable degrees of transparency: translucent elements where once there were none, traditional window areas that will have opaque elements and graduated progressions from opaque to see-through.

Art installation moves 100,000 toy cars an hour

Tue, 04 Mar 2014

IT'S NO PICASSO, but this installation by conceptual artist Chris Burden certainly has the potential to be moving. Called Metropolis II, this amazing construction took Chris and his chief engineer four years to design and create and expands significantly on Metropolis I - the latest version has 18 roadways including one six-lane carriageway. It also has a rail network with HO-scale model trains, and running at capacity it pumps 100,000 cars around its network at a scale speed of 230mph.