Caps, Rotors & Contacts for Sale
- Airtex 4r1021 white polyester material rotor brand new(US $1.99)
- Two (2) mr. gasket 1263c distributor cap male/hei clear clamp-down gm v8(US $103.89)
- Davis unified ignition cap & rotor black male/hei brass terminals screwdown jeep(US $34.95)
- Gm oem 10452459 distributor cap(US $48.47)
- New old stock standard motor fd-152 distributor cap 1970's ford v-8 engines(US $5.99)
- E-tron components h.e.i. rotor jr94 134-803 wa352 (US $12.02)
Hyundai Genesis (2008): First official pictures
Wed, 16 Jan 2008By Stephen Dobie First Official Pictures 16 January 2008 18:30 It’s not coming to the UK, but it doesn’t mean that Hyundai won’t crow about it. This is the Genesis, the Korean company’s latest attack on the premium brands, and designed to make us forget about previous attempts like the XG30. But concurrently it’s also because of the Genesis’ predecessors that we won’t get the new car.
London rush hour 'worst in UK'
Thu, 05 Jun 2014ANALYSIS of in-car telematics data has revealed that London commuters get the worst deal in rush hour, with average speeds 30% slower than those across other British cities. The study of 20 million miles of telematics data by Direct Line Drive Plus shows that despite London having more congestion-fighting measures than anywhere else in the country, its road-based commuters suffer worse peak time traffic misery than anywhere else. During peak times, cars in Westminster travel at an average speed of just 10.06mph, compared to a figure of 14.38mph across the biggest British cities.
Drink-and-drive deaths down in 2007
Fri, 08 Aug 2008By Tom Richards Motor Industry 08 August 2008 12:08 The latest figures from the Department for Transport show the number of people killed in drink-driving accidents in the UK fell in 2007. According to the data the number of fatal accidents dropped by 16 percent from 2006 to 2007 (from 490 to 410), while the number of deaths in these accidents fell 18 percent (down to 460 in 2007 from 650 in 2006). But while the number of deaths is going down, hospitals are still being kept busy as drink-drive casualties rose from 11,840 in 2006 to 12,260 in 2007, a jump of four percent.