B&m 40480 Nitrous Holeshot 2400 Torque Converter For 71-91 Ford on 2040-parts.com
Greenville, Wisconsin, US
Torque Converters for Sale
- B&m 50402 holeshot 2400 torque converter for 93-04 ford, lincoln, & mercury(US $519.96)
- B&m 50448 holeshot 2000 torque converter for 70-82 ford, lincoln and mercury(US $288.96)
- B&m 50442 tork master 3000 torque converter for ford, lincoln, & mercury(US $296.98)
- B&m 70416 holeshot 2000 torque converter for 82-84 gm(US $347.98)
- B&m 70441 holeshot 2400 torque converter for gm corvette, camaro and firebird(US $455.82)
- B&m 70415 holeshot 2400 torque converter for 82-84 gm(US $483.24)
Pedigreed 1980 Porsche 933 (almost) ready to race for $15,000
Fri, 20 May 2011Looking for a pedigreed piece of racing machinery on the cheap? One could do worse than this example of a 1980 Porsche 933, listed by our good friends at Bring a Trailer. They claim that this is one of sixteen 924 chassis cars factory-developed in Weissach, Germany, and delivered to Holbert Racing in Pennsylvania.
Lamborghini Urus SUV confirmed to arrive in 2017
Tue, 14 May 2013The Urus will be VW Group’s lightest and quickest SUV – expected to best even the Porsche Cayenne Turbo – and will be built on VW’s new large SUV platform – the same platform that will underpin the Bentley Falcon SUV, Audi Q7 (and Audi Q9) and Porsche Cayenne – and will use a forged carbon composite structure from the central tunnel to the rear suspension to save weight. Power for the Urus is expected to come from the twin-turbo V8 we’ve already seen in the Bentley Continental GT and Audis, producing something in the region of 600bhp and perhaps even more if Lamborghini add a hybrid option to throw some electric assistance at the V8′s 600 horses. It seems likely the Urus concept will remain largely unchanged for production, although we could see some toning down of its more extreme elements, as Lamborghini look to add 3,000 sales a year to their annual total when the Urus hits showrooms.
Baby Range Rover confirmed in Land Rover shake-up
Thu, 24 Sep 2009By Phil McNamara Motor Industry 24 September 2009 11:08 The shake up at Jaguar/Land Rover continues, with a consolidation of the brands’ Midlands manufacturing facilities announced alongside plans for more vehicles. The headline news is that Land Rover’s Solihull factory and Jaguar’s Castle Bromwich plant will be amalgamated over the next 10 years. JLR promises there will be no compulsory redundancies, and the industrial logic is compelling: consolidating production of the Range Rover/Discovery and XJ/XK/XF lines will bring around 200,000 vehicles together under one roof – still 100,000 fewer cars than Mini builds a year down in Oxford. The move will reduce JLR’s fixed costs, provide room to grow and give greater flexibility to meet the natural ebb and flow of demand. JLR has also confirmed production of the LRX, the baby Range Rover.