Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

2003 Suzuki Ltz 400 Kfx 400 Engine Gears Bolts Tear Down Grab Bag on 2040-parts.com

US $19.99
Location:

Branchdale, Pennsylvania, US

Branchdale, Pennsylvania, US
Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Item must be returned within:14 Days Refund will be given as:Money Back Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Return policy details:No returns after 14 days.Buyer pays return shipping and refund is for item price only. Restocking Fee:No

2003 SUZUKI LTZ 400

MISC. ENGINE GEARS, NUTS, BOLTS ETC.

IN GOOD CONDITION

CAME OFF RUNNING BIKE

READY FOR USE

ANY QUESTIONS PLEASE ASK

MAY FIT OTHER MAKES AND MODELS

THANKS!

Porsche 998 (911) caught testing

Thu, 22 Jan 2009

The current version of the 911 has not long been refreshed, and still has more to deliver. Only the Carrera and Targa have had the facelift so far, and still to come is the Turbo, not to mention the GT3. But Porsche is already a long way down the road with the next generation 911 (998), which is not expected to launch until 2011, as you can see from this spy shot taken in rather chilly Arctic climes.

Renault Twingo Gordini Renaultsport revealed

Wed, 25 Nov 2009

The new Twingo Gordini Renaultsport will go on sale in March 2010 It’s only a couple of weeks since we reported that Renault are going to revive the Renault Gordini badge for a new range of sporty cars, a report that was followed a few days later with a confirmation from Renault, and the news that the Twingo Gordini Renaultsport would be the first to launch. And Renault has now revealed the first of the Gordini cars. The new Twingo Gordini stays faithful to the heritage of the Gordini moniker with a Fench Blue paint job, white stripes and quilted leather.

General Motors fires back at Volkswagen

Thu, 14 Jul 2011

General Motors issued a terse response this week to published comments by Volkswagen CEO Martin Winterkorn, who suggested to the German press that Opel could be sold to a Chinese competitor. Detroit-based GM called Winterkorn's comments “regrettable” and accused him of “fanning speculation.” Opel was nearly sold to Magna and Russian investors in the wake of GM's 2009 bankruptcy. But then-CEO Ed Whitacre and the corporate board reversed that decision, igniting controversy from German political and labor leaders who have long chafed under American oversight.