Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Yamaha Vmax Custom Polished Aluminum Radiator Cover Fits 1985-2007 on 2040-parts.com

US $200.00
Location:

Lanoka Harbor, New Jersey, US

Lanoka Harbor, New Jersey, US
Returns Accepted:ReturnsNotAccepted Placement on Vehicle:Front Surface Finish:polished aluminum Warranty:No

True Custom piece for those one off,stand out bikes.   One piece wrap around design.  Made of 1/8" 6061 Show polished aluminum.  Mounts from underneath and slides up into place.

All hand cut and crafted, not cookie cutter made. 50 hrs work involved.

    1 of 2 made,no more.     Flows plenty of air,the one on my bike was much more restrictive and created no issues what so ever

This was the first one ever made, Quickly replaced it with the one pictured at the end of the photos to tie in with my bikes theme.

    Has minimal use and presents as close to new condition.9.5 out of 10. Mainly just a few pin tip size pitting marks.

You have to look hard for them. On the bike you will never see them.

Any ? don't hesitate to ask.  609-242-7257   Thanks

Defending an old-school Land Rover

Mon, 15 Oct 2012

I don't know how to respond today after seeing on our very own homepage that the Land Rover people will bring the successor of its beloved Defender to the United States market. The Defender is a vehicle about which “lust” is an insufficiently weak noun or verb; current and vintage Defenders elicit something beyond an emotive response. They are visceral.

Chevy Volt production stopped as sales falter

Sat, 03 Mar 2012

Chevy Volt production halted General Motors has announced that they’re halting production of the range-extender Chevrolet Volt as sales falter. The Chevy Volt is General Motors’ car of the future (and sister car to the Vauxhall Ampera) with a range extender engine and the ability to run on a plug-in charge. And GM proclaimed it as the future of the company and did everything they could to keep costs in check.

Le Mans 24-hour race 2010: CAR's guide to the classes

Wed, 09 Jun 2010

This year, teams are split into two categories: Prototype and Grand Touring. The former are cars created specifically for endurance racing, the latter are homologated from road cars. Each category is then split into two further disciplines – one a higher performance grade, the other slightly lower.