1993-1997 Polaris Lite Gt Gates G-force Belt Drive Kevlar Aramid Vm on 2040-parts.com
Sacramento, California, US
Clutch & Drive Belts for Sale
1992-1995 yamaha et410tr enticer ii lt gates g-force belt drive mx(US $69.79)
1988 arctic cat el tigre 5000 gates g-force belt drive kevlar aramid qk(US $48.79)
1988-1989 yamaha ex570e exciter deluxe gates g-force belt drive ix(US $69.59)
2005-2007 yamaha rsg90 rs rage gates g-force c12 belt drive carbon fiber nk(US $117.89)
1974 yamaha gp246 gates g-force belt drive kevlar aramid qh(US $47.99)
2010 ski-doo renegade 1200 x gates g-force c12 belt drive carbon fiber jn(US $118.39)
Porsche Cayenne S Diesel (2012) first pictures
Wed, 12 Sep 2012Porsche has equipped its Cayenne SUV with a twin-turbo diesel engine, creating (no surprises here) the Cayenne S diesel. The 4.2-litre bi-turbo oil-burner puts out 376bhp and a rather wholesome 626lb ft of torque. That latter figures bests even the flagship petrol Cayenne Turbo: that car's twin-blown petrol V8 produces 'only' 516lb ft - and costs around £28k more than the Cayenne S Diesel.
New SEAT Leon goes in to production
Sun, 28 Oct 2012The new SEAT Leon (2013) – revealed at the Paris Motor Show – has started production in Spain ahead of first deliveries in March 2013. SEAT has invested heavily in the Martorell plant in recent years – a shining light of success in a sea of Spanish manufacturing despair – with a £650 million investment in new facilities and R&D making Martorell a modern and efficient facility for the new Leon as well as the Ibiza, Altea and Exeo (and the Audi Q3). Not only has the investment in Martorell secured the jobs of 1600 Spanish workers (and four times as many in the supply chain), it promise more jobs too if the Leon turns out to be as appealing as it looks.
One Lap of the Web: Every girl's crazy for a sharp-dressed Citro
Fri, 21 Feb 2014-- Fiat industrialist Gianni Agnelli was the man who put postwar Italy on inexpensive wheels, and himself in expensive clothes -- and became an icon in the process. Well, he was Italian. No surprise there -- some stereotypes are true for a reason.
