Mercedes S320 S420 S500 16 Inch Chrome Wheel Exchange S on 2040-parts.com
Newbury Park, California, US
Wheels for Sale
- Mercedes gl350 gl450 gl500 20 inch chrome wheels rims 20" gl 350 450 500 bluetec(US $1,599.50)
- Mercedes 300se s320 s420 s500 16 inch chrome wheels s(US $1,195.00)
- Land range rover 16 inch chrome wheels rims discovery 2 se 16x8 72163 "lightning(US $712.25)
- Bmw 525i 528i 530i 540i 17 inch chrome wheel exchange 525 528 530 i 17"(US $585.00)
- Mercedes cls550 19" chrome wheel exchange cls 550 rims(US $735.00)
- Mercedes c230 c320 17" chrome wheel exchange c class oe(US $585.00)
Range Rover Sport SVR the fastest SUV around the Nurburgring
Wed, 30 Jul 2014By Tim Pollard Motoring Issues 30 July 2014 11:35 In a questionable bout of willy-waving, Land Rover today announced one of the most pointless speed records we’ve yet heard: the new Range Rover Sport SVR became the fastest production SUV around the Nurburgring. The breathed-over RR SVR lapped the Nordschleife in 8min 14sec, spelling out the performance credentials of the fastest ever Land Rover. The record was set by a standard production SVR, which will be unveiled sans disguise later this summer.
Lamborghini Brand and Design Director steps down
Tue, 14 Dec 2010According to well-placed sources within the automotive design community, Car Design News has learned that Manfred Fitzgerald, Brand and Design Director at Lamborghini, has been asked to leave the company. It is presumed his role with the company's design aspects will likely be absorbed by current Audi Group Head of Design Wolfgang Egger. Fitzgerald had been working at Lamborghini since 1999, shortly after the sports car maker was bought by parent company Volkswagen through Audi AG.
Where did the word 'automobile' come from?
Mon, 06 Jan 2014On Jan. 3, 1899, the New York Times printed the word "automobile" upon its austere pages. It wasn't the first publication to do so; Scientific American used the phrase "automobile carriage" in a May 14, 1898, review of the Winton Motor Carriage, but the Grey Lady -- a more influential publication -- was the first to debate the term.