Listing is for an owners manual for a 2015/2016 Yamaha R3. Condition is 9/10. LIT-11616-28-57 |
Yamaha for Sale
Yamaha owners service manual for tt-r125m tt-r125mc 2000(US $23.27)
Yamaha motorcycle wiring diagram collection on cd 2007(US $23.01)
Yamaha owners service manual for tt-r125t tt-r125et tt-r125lwt tt-r125lwet 2005(US $26.58)
Yamaha owners service manual for tt-r50ev 2006(US $23.05)
Yamaha owners service manual for tt-r125ex tt-r125lx tt-r125lex 2008(US $23.03)
Yamaha owners service manual for pw80v 2006 new(US $23.27)
Infiniti Q50 to arrive at Geneva 2013 with ‘European Power’
Tue, 05 Feb 2013The new Infiniti Q50 – the Infiniti formerly known as the G37 – will make its European debut at Geneva 2013 with a diesel and turbo petrol option. The Infiniti Q50 debuted at the Detroit Auto Show last month and came with the same two engine options the G37 got, namely the 3.7 litre V6 petrol with 323bhp and a 3.5 litre V6 hybrid sporting a total of 355bhp. But that engine lineup isn’t going to be enough to make sales of the new Q50 in Europe, where fuel costs so much more than in Infiniti’s core U.S.
97% of UK Lexus sold in 2014 will be hybrids
Mon, 09 Dec 2013Speaking during the European launch of the new Lexus GS300h – the new entry-level hybrid in the executive GS range – Lexus UK director, Richard Balshaw, revealed that 97% of all Lexus sold in the UK next year are likely to be hybrids. The GS300h’s deputy chief engineer, Yukihiro Kito, als confirmed to MSN Cars that the return of diesel-powered Lexus vehicles is unlikely to happen any time soon – if at all. On Bing: see pictures of Lexus hybrids Find out how much a used Lexus costs on Auto Trader According to Kito-san, diesel just does not make sense for Lexus given the markets the company is chiefly competitive in, which is to say the USA and Asia.
'Paradox' in transport policy claim
Tue, 26 Nov 2013THERE IS A "paradox at the heart" of the Government's roads programme, a transport policy professor has told MPs. The question on whether traffic levels would increase or decrease in the future was unresolved, University College London emeritus professor of transport policy Phil Goodwin told the House of Commons Transport Committee. The paradox was that if traffic levels increased the planned roads programme was "not big enough to make an improvement", he said.