2001 Yamaha Yz250f Rear Disc Brake Rotor 00 01 02 03 04 05 on 2040-parts.com
Lake Havasu City, Arizona, US
Brakes & Suspension for Sale
2001 yamaha yz250f front brake caliper and bracket 00 01 02 03 04 05 (US $32.00)
2001 yamaha yz250f swingarm bolt swing arm axle pivot 00 01 02 03 04 05 (US $10.00)
2001 yamaha yz250f gas petcock fuel valve pet cock shutoff 99 00 01 02 03 (US $13.00)
2001 yamaha yz250f applied upper triple fork clamp tree fat bar wr250f (US $60.00)
1997 yz250 nissin rear back brake master cylinder 94 95 96 97 98 99 00(US $21.00)
2001 yamaha yz250f rear brake caliper and bracket 00 01 02 03 04 05 (US $35.00)
Citroen Metropolis – the Citroen DS6?
Mon, 19 Apr 2010The Citroen Metropolis Concept - the Citroen DS6? We’ve seen Citroen rediscover their Mojo of late. Their style and confidence has returned as they aim to reposition themselves as the luxury bit of PSA, leaving the sporty bit to Peugeot.
Film Friday: A Wonderful New World of Fords has descended from the heavens!
Fri, 11 Apr 2014In a day when every automaker seems to be eager to latch on to the smallest details -- a few pounds of weight shaved here and there, some silly feature designed to keep you and your family protected in an accident, a flashier infotainment setup -- to sell their product, this 1960 Ford spot is a breath of fresh air. There's none of this oh-so-carefully hedged “our cars are pretty OK!” nonsense in this spot for the 1960 Thunderbird, Falcon and Galaxie. There's nary a world about fuel economy (OK, one mention -- the Falcon supposedly gets up to 30 mpg).
Webinars: Defining the boundary between Technical and Concept Surfacing using Alias
Wed, 12 Oct 2011CDN hosted a new webinar entitled 'Defining the boundary between Technical and Concept Surfacing using Autodesk Alias' on October 13, 2011. The online seminar was especially relevant for design engineers (from aerospace and consumer product industries as well as automotive), for surface modelers, and for lead designers who need to understand the differences between concept surfacing and Class A surfacing. The webinar is now available to view in our archive.


