Other for Sale
- Stomp design traction pads black 55-4007b(US $55.68)
- 2000 cr250r cr 250/125 case saver engine motor guard protector cover shield(US $7.00)
- Driven racing axle block slider black drax-112-bk(US $98.64)
- Cylinder works big bore cylinder, honda crf250r and x 2004-2009(US $40.00)
- 2012 - 2013 kawasaki z1000 targa fender eliminator for bikes w/ integrated lt.(US $45.85)
- 1980 honda na50 express 2 choke cable 79-80 vintage moped(US $9.99)
Aston Martin Rapide – Official Valencia video
Sat, 20 Feb 2010We have official video of the Aston Martin Rapide from Valencia Back at the start of February Aston Martin flew the world’s media to Valencia to party with the new Aston Martin Rapide. Even though Cars UK didn’t get an invite we decided to shove up a review of the Rapide covering what we knew from all the bumph Aston Martin had sent us and the opinions we’d formed from seeing the car. It wasn’t sour grapes – although it would have been nice to be asked – but looking at the reviews written by those who went on the ‘Jolly’ we were pretty much on the money.
Porsche Panamera (2009): first official photos
Mon, 24 Nov 2008By Tim Pollard First Official Pictures 24 November 2008 09:00 Today's launch of the new Porsche Panamera is a timely reminder that Porsche is no stranger to controversy. It is happiest pursuing mechanical layouts others deem impossible, turning gamekeeper and buying Volkswagen outright, and laughing in the face of cynics who deplore Porsche-badged off-roaders. The new Panamera sports saloon is going to reignite plenty more controversy, trust us.
Last summer of speed?
Wed, 08 May 2013If you want to enjoy driving on the unlimited-speed German autobahn, you might want to get in gear. If the opposition Social Democratic Party wins in this September's elections, party leader Sigmar Gabriel promises to form a coalition with the Green Party -- and both say they'll limit autobahn speeds to 120 kmh (about 75 mph), the German publication Bild is reporting. Not so fast, says the SDP's actual candidate for German chancellor, Peer Steinbrueck, who said he saw “no reason” to reignite the long-running debate over autobahn speeds, Bild reported.