Youth Motocross Pants Size 20 Answer Brand Racing Brand New on 2040-parts.com
Pottstown, Pennsylvania, US
New with tags youth size 20 Answer Syncron motocross pants. Inseam length is 16 inches waist is approx 20-21 inches. All contact points in knees, tailbone, and hips have built in padding. Elastic gather is pant cuffs which sit on top of boots, elestic adjustable waistband and zipper fly. These pants were $56.00 new, which still shows on the tag. From smoke free pet free home.
Off-Road Gear for Sale
- Youth motocross pants size 16 answer brand racing brand new(US $15.00)
- Fox riding pants(US $0.99)
- Red w30 one industries carbon yamaha pants 2013 model(US $120.00)
- Grey w34 one industries reactor apex vented pants 2013 model(US $160.00)
- 01030-04347-y fox hc rockstar mx atv off road adult yellow pants jersey combo(US $109.95)
- Yamaha carbon off road riding pants one industries mens 34 blue motocross mx atv(US $124.95)
Chrysler is set to invest $500 million in Toledo Jeep assembly plant
Wed, 16 Nov 2011Chrysler Group plans to invest $500 million in its Toledo North Assembly Plant and hire a second shift of workers over the next year to build a new Fiat-based SUV for Jeep, as well as other vehicles. "This plant has been chosen to build the future Jeep SUV to replace the current Jeep Liberty that will be exported to markets all over the world," CEO Sergio Marchionne said at the plant Wednesday. "Jeep is at the heart of our plans to internationalize Chrysler, a process which is being accelerated by Chrysler's access to Fiat's distribution capabilities in Europe and Latin America." Toledo North is Chrysler's only assembly plant with only one shift of workers.
Mini Mk2 (2006): first official pictures
Mon, 14 Aug 2006By Angus Fitton First Official Pictures 14 August 2006 15:01 The lowdown The disguise is off. No more speculation, spy shots or sneak previews - this is the face of the all-new, faster, bigger, better Mini. No, we haven't jumbled up the pictures - the car pictured really is the the new Mini, due to hit our streets in October.
CCTV ban will 'put pupils at risk'
Fri, 13 Dec 2013GOVERNMENT PLANS to possibly ban CCTV parking cameras will put schoolchildren at risk, council leaders and head teachers have warned. Councils use CCTV enforcement vehicles to tackle dangerous and illegal parking outside schools including cars blocking driveways, driving along pavements and stopping on yellow zig-zag lines outside school gates. They are often introduced at the request of parents or teachers concerned about the safety of schoolchildren and act as a visible deterrent to the thoughtless minority of drivers who put children's safety at risk.