Lenco 20784-001 Electric Hatch Lifts on 2040-parts.com
Stuart, Florida, United States
Controls & Steering for Sale
- Seadoo bombardier watercraft 3d gti gts gtx sp xp pwc pink skull gel bar grips(US $13.95)
- Teleflex used cable steering helm with tilt unit(US $70.00)
- Marine / boat steering wheel adapter ~19 spline ~5 hole x 2 3/4 b.p. (black) new(US $44.95)
- Boat steering wheel chrome 5 spoke(US $50.00)
- Stazo type 13 sailboat yacht steering wheel 24" new(US $625.00)
- Positive 6 gauge battery cable lead(US $20.00)
Lyonheart K Jaguar E-Type: Price from €360,000
Tue, 19 Mar 2013The Lyonheart K – a recreation of the Jaguar E-Type – will cost from €360k for the Coupe and €375k for the Convertible (pus vat). For your €360k plus VAT (roughly £366k inc vat) you get all the beauty of an E-Type but with modern underpinnings including the heart of a Jaguar XK and its 5.0 litre supercharged V8 with Cosworth tweaks to deliver 575PS offering a very non-E-Type 0-62mph of under 4 seconds. Fifty per cent of Lyonheart K production is staying in Europe, 20 per cent is off to the Middle East and 30 per cent to China, with a total of just 250 cars being built, starting in December 2013 and ending in the summer of 2015.
Record expected for Auto Union sale
Wed, 07 Feb 2007By James Mullan Motor Industry 07 February 2007 09:21 A rare 1939 Auto Union Type D grand prix car is tipped to tear up the record books this month when it goes under the hammer – for an estimated price of up to £7.8 million. Auto Union developed the Type D racing car with a mid-mounted 3.0-litre 12-cylinder engine; in 1939, it was modified with the addition of a twin supercharger, increasing power 420bhp to 460bhp – enough for a top speed of 205mph. This particular car won the French and Yugoslavian Grand Prix in 1939, but at the end of the Second World War it was transported from East Germany to the former Soviet Union by Russian occupation forces as spoils of war.
Mercedes-Benz Bionic car at MoMA
Thu, 28 Feb 2008Unveiled in June 2005, the Bionic car was developed by designers, engineers and biologists working hand in hand. Its template was a sea dweller from tropical latitudes: Ostracion Cubicus - more commonly known as the boxfish. Despite its unusual-looking shape, the fish is extremely aerodynamic and can therefore move using a minimal amount of energy.