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2005 Arctic Cat Firecat F7 Sabercat Sno Pro Tailight Lense And Housing on 2040-parts.com

US $19.00
Location:

Franklin, New Hampshire, US

Franklin, New Hampshire, US
Item must be returned within:14 Days Refund will be given as:Money Back Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Restocking Fee:No Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Return policy details:

REAR TAIL LAMP ASSEMBLY REMOVED FROM 2005 ARCTIC CAT FIRECAT. GREAT SHAPE INCLUDES LENS,HOUSING,WIRING & HARDWARE.

This will fit all 2003-2006 Arctic Cat Firecat, 2004-2006 Arctic Cat Sabercat and the 440 snopro in the firecat chassis from 2003-2007. 

Caterham Seven Supersport (2011) first official pictures

Mon, 11 Apr 2011

This is the new Caterham Seven Supersport, a new roadster that offers track-biased fun for less than £20k. The Seven shape is familiar, but Caterham has pinched parts from its Supersport race series cars (which sit above the Academy and Roadsport classes, but below the Superlight and forthcoming SP/300R) to create this new Supersport model.  Is the new Caterham Seven Supersport road car exactly the same as the race car? Not quite, but the pair are similar.

Koenigsegg planning an entry-level car – but it’ll still cost £500k

Sat, 26 Apr 2014

Koenigsegg are planning an entry-level car at half the price of the Agera R (pictured) Think of the cars that Christian von Koenigsegg has made since he started with the CC8S in 2002 and you think of them as extremes of the supercar genre; the Swedish engineering take on the bloated and massively complex Bugatti Veyron. Christian’s men in a shed in Sweden have gone on to make a series of progressively quicker and more impressive supercars, through the CCR, CCX and the Agera and on to the current most extreme iteration – the Koenigsegg One:1. But it looks like Christian has decided that his ambition to create the world’s greatest hypercar leaves room for a ‘Lesser’ Koenigsegg, a car that still has innovative engineering and extreme performance but comes at a lower price.

Remember this twin-engine, AWD, home-brew Scirocco?

Tue, 08 Apr 2014

Obviously, the big problem with the VW Scirocco is that its rear wheels aren't driven. Around a decade ago, a guy named Anson decided to solve that problem by shoving a second VW motor in the rear end of his Scirocco. Sure, VW had done it before, but this enterprising do-it-yourselfer spent just $1,800 on the build.