2010 Arctic Cat Tz1 Turbo Lxr Le Gates G-force Belt Drive Kevlar Aramid Si on 2040-parts.com
Sacramento, California, US
Clutch & Drive Belts for Sale
2011 ski-doo expedition sport 600 ace gates g-force belt drive ri(US $70.29)
2000-2001 ski-doo grand touring 600 gates g-force belt drive ir(US $60.79)
1999-2000 ski-doo grand touring 700 gates g-force belt drive yy(US $60.89)
1998 ski-doo formula iii 700 r gates g-force belt drive kevlar aramid pg(US $74.19)
1994-1997 ski-doo formula z gates g-force belt drive kevlar aramid po(US $49.29)
1999-2000 arctic cat powder special 700 gates g-force c12 belt drive aq(US $119.49)
AA warns of automated penalties
Thu, 03 Oct 2013DRIVERS are still suffering a year on from the time most wheelclampers were banned from operating in private car parks, according to the AA. Twelve months on, parking enforcement firms are reaping large sums from issuing automated "penalty" tickets. The AA said that while Communities Minister Eric Pickles is reining in local authorities who over-zealously use CCTV, private parking operators now rely heavily on this technology and automatic number plate recognition (ANPR) to watch drivers and issue tickets through the post when they put a foot wrong in parking areas.
Chrysler offers to double cash-for-guzzlers incentive on most '09 models
Wed, 22 Jul 2009The Chrysler Group is offering consumers $4,500 on most of its 2009 models, doubling the cash-for-guzzlers incentive offered by the federal government. "Double Ca$h for Your Old Car," offers up to $4,500 cash or 0 percent financing for 72 months on qualifying new vehicles, even if the consumer's trade-in doesn't qualify for the federal incentive. The program starts Thursday, July 23, and runs through August, Chrysler announced Wednesday.
A Fine Day For Birmingham Police
Mon, 20 Jan 2014POLICE in Birmingham have discovered they are not immune from traffic fines, after figures released by West Midlands Police show that local law enforcement have fallen foul of the city’s tough stance on bus lane offenders. In a hard-line approach, which had drawn criticism from some drivers, Birmingham City Council put up new signs on existing bus lanes in the heart of the city barring all other vehicles from using them and enforcing the rule with traffic cameras to catch the culprits who flout the ban. As a result, a reported 60,000 fines were issued by the end of last year following the scheme's launch in September, with police drivers accounting for 408 of those transgressions and individual drivers responsible for payment of the fine.
