Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

2006 Arctic Cat Firecat F7 Brake Caliper F5 F6 Sabercat on 2040-parts.com

US $69.00
Location:

Tewksbury, Massachusetts, United States

Tewksbury, Massachusetts, United States
Condition:Used Manufacturer Part Number:0702-655

Brake caliper removed from a 2006 F7. Includes brake pads and bearings and as shown in pics. In good working condition. Will work on all year and model Firecats and Sabercats with Diamond Drive Gear box.
Retail price new: $268.24

Hand-built Porsche 'Frankfurt Flyer' special up for sale on eBay

Mon, 27 Jan 2014

This piece of organic-looking, handcrafted aluminium is called the ‘Frankfurt Flyer’ – a bespoke creation by American engineer Chris Runge. It’s rather special too, as the original Flyer racing car is the forebear to one of the most famous Porsche models ever, the 550 Spyder. This is one man’s painstaking recreation of one of the finest post-war sports cars to ever see the light of day, and it could be yours for $60,000 – around £36,500.

Subaru BRZ-STI concept

Wed, 02 Nov 2011

Subaru is poised to unveil the BRZ-STI concept at the at the LA auto show later this month. A concept version of the all-new rear-wheel drive compact sports car jointly developed with Toyota, the lightweight BRZ shares most of its mechanical components with the Toyota FT-86 concept, which made its first public appearance at the 2009 Tokyo motor show. A world away from Subaru's ‘Sports Car Architecture' concept that has made the rounds at the past few motor shows, the BRZ's design is remarkably similar to that of the FT-86.

Jaguar Land Rover sales drive Tata Motors’ profit

Tue, 14 Feb 2012

JLR strong sales drive Tata Motors profits Jaguar Land Rover sales rose 41 per cent in the last quarter to £3.75 billion with profits of £440 million, propping up Tata’s domestic decline. When Tata bought Jaguar Land Rover from Ford back in 2008 for $2.3 billion it offered promise for the future, but most analysts thought Tata had made a big mistake buying JLR for so much, just as the world economy started to slip ion to the near depression we’re still fighting. But the analysts were wrong.