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05 Verucci Scooter 50cc 49 Qingqi - Seat Release Latch on 2040-parts.com

US $12.00
Location:

Melbourne, Florida, US

Melbourne, Florida, US
Item must be returned within:14 Days Refund will be given as:Money Back Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Return policy details:Refunds will be issued for the price of the item Only, Less 20% restocking fee for Returns made at Buyers request. Shipping charges are not refundable Except if the item was not as described. Item cancellations are subject to fee of 5% of total paid for each item canceled but not shipped minimum fee is $2.50 Once items have left our shop the fee is as stated above (20%) Restocking Fee:10%

Aspid tease all new sports car

Wed, 23 May 2012

Aspid tease Aspid (which were IFR Aspid) – Spanish sports car maker – is teasing a new sports car to be revealed in the next few weeks. Aspid is a Spanish maker of sports cars responsible for the rather retro – at least in styling – SuperSport model. We caught up with the Aspid SuperSport at Salon Prive a couple of years ago, and we were impressed by a Caterham-style car offering very high levels of fit and finish and a remarkable 0-62mph in under 3 seconds.

Cadillac may get future rear-drive hybrids

Mon, 08 Feb 2010

General Motors' two mode hybrid powertrain, used only in trucks, will migrate to rear-drive cars in the next generation, said Tom Stephens, GM's vice chairman of global product operations. Two likely candidates: Cadillacs, says consultant Jim Hall of 2953 Analytics in suburban Detroit. Last month, GM said it is developing an electric motor that is 25 percent smaller and 20 percent more powerful than the motor used in today's two mode hybrid full-sized trucks.

GPS signals trump cellular in FCC battle

Tue, 28 Feb 2012

Bandwidth has become a precious commodity. Just ask any owner of a car that has an analog OnStar system that wound up being a useless brick when digital cellular signals were declared to be the only game in town. LightSquared, a company that grew out of the satellite-communications industry, is banking that the chunk of spectrum it holds the rights to will help smaller, regional competitors compete with the big wireless providers.