1996 Polaris Xplorer Oem Gear Selector Hi, Low, Reverse #1341182 on 2040-parts.com
Fairbanks, Alaska, United States
Transmissions & Chains for Sale
Tusk 520 o-ring chain 520x88 tko520-088(US $50.13)
Xdr 81209 xdr off-road magnum grip shift handle(US $24.37)
2008 can am outlander 800 4x4 secondary clutch assembly hardware(US $199.00)
Primary and secondary clutch for 2015 canam outlander 1000(US $300.00)
1983 honda 200 e shift drum stopper cap 24722-958-680 t048(US $10.00)
Polaris ace 325 belt(US $30.00)
Jaguar XF 2.2 Diesel: 57mpg on a romp to Munich
Mon, 27 Jun 2011Jaguar XF 2.2 Diesel on its way to 57mpg The much denied – but always going to happen – Jaguar XF 2.2 Diesel finally arrived officially at the New York Motor Show in April. And actually, Michael-extracting apart, the arrival of the 2.2 Diesel XF is a sure sign that Jaguar has its swagger back. Because if they were still afraid - as they were for a very long time - that a cheaper, smaller-engined XF would undermine the premium status the XF had earned since its arrival, they’d have continued to make excuses for its absence from the XF range.
New Aston Martin V12 Vantage S quicker than Jaguar F-Type V8 S
Fri, 21 Jun 2013The new Aston Martin V12 Vantage S (pictured) is Aston’s quickest car At the end of last month, as expected, and following the ending of production of the V12 Vantage, the new Aston Martin V12 Vantage S arrived. Aston proclaimed the new V12 Vantage S as the quickest production car they’d ever built (with the exception of the £1 million One-77) but declined to tell us exactly how quick it was. But now AML have finished playing with their stopwatch and declared the V12 Vantage S will get to 62mph in 3.9 seconds (0-60mph in 3.7s), an improvement of 0.3 seconds on the V12 Vantage and giving the V12 Vantage S the edge over the car we think it should be compared to – the new Jaguar F-Type V8 S.
Angriest drivers are from London
Mon, 12 May 2014THE CAPITAL CITY of the UK is home to the country’s angriest drivers, with 63% of those who drive in London admitting that getting behind the wheel of a car made them aggressive and angry. The most common reasons for drivers’ bad moods in London are traffic jams (45%), cyclists and pedestrians (34%) and waiting at traffic lights and junctions (33%). Lorries and delivery drivers also accounted for 26% and bad manners from other drivers ranked with 24%.