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Kawasaki 750 Sx Sxi Ss Xi Xir St Sts Zxi Stx Ssxi Cylinder Head Small Pin on 2040-parts.com

US $33.00
Location:

San Tan Valley, Arizona, United States

San Tan Valley, Arizona, United States
Condition:Used Brand:Kawasaki Warranty:No

Cylinder head from a 92 750 sx small pin engine. Head is in good condition and when installed netted around 155 psi for compression. Spark plugs are not included. They're only there to display threads are good. Please inspect pictures. **Also for sale locally. Will end auction early if sold. **

Race and refuel with the Octane 120 Pro Beer Arcade gaming system

Mon, 18 Apr 2011

While no one at AutoWeek would ever condone drinking and driving, kicking back with a few while playing your favorite racing simulator is a different story. And if you're going to go down that road, go all the way with the Octane 120 Pro Beer Arcade from Dream Arcades. What is a Beer Arcade, you ask?

Rally Ace Beats Own Isle Of Man Lap Record

Thu, 05 Jun 2014

SUBARU’S WRX STI has once again broken the four-wheeled lap record around the famous Isle of Man TT circuit, with British rally champion Mark Higgins setting a new record of 19 minutes 26 seconds in a production version of the firm’s newly launched high-performance saloon. Higgins’s lap around the challenging 37.8-mile TT Mountain course saw him post an average speed of 116mph and a top speed of over 160mph. Manxman Higgins completed his timed run under closed road conditions as part of the TT schedule and beat his previous record, set in 2011, when he set a time of 19 minutes 56.7 seconds at the wheel of the previous-generation WRX STI, breaking a record that had stood for 21 years.

This day in Autoweek history: Driving across France in a Ford Sierra RS Cosworth

Fri, 23 Sep 2011

Today we relive a drive across France in the Ford Sierra Sapphire RS Cosworth with Cynthia Claes. This potent four-door sedan offered rear-wheel drive, a Borg-Warner five-speed manual transmission and a claimed top speed of 150 mph from its turbocharged 2.0-liter, twin-cam four-cylinder engine. Introduced in 1986, the original Sierra saw 5,542 units constructed; 5,000 were needed for homologation in Class A rally competition, its original purpose.