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Aeromotive Replacement 10 Micron Fabric Element (for 12301 Filter Assembly) on 2040-parts.com

US $14.31
Location:

Madison Heights, Michigan, United States

Madison Heights, Michigan, United States
Condition:New Brand:Aeromotive Manufacturer Part Number:12601

   You want to build fast machines. And Aeromotive wants to help you do it. That's the core of everything behind Aeromotive. That's because, like you, Aeromotive lives and breathes performance vehicles. Power. Performance. Speed. Reliability. Durability. These qualities are built into every product and system that displays the Aeromotive name.

You'll find Aeromotive at home and out in front in challenging conditions at the track, on the street, and in the water. Aeromotive products have been engineered, manufactured, and tested to meet these conditions - your conditions. Aeromotive delivers engineering expertise earned in the aerospace industry, plus a proven track record of performance.

If you're driven by performance, your system should be fueled by Aeromotive's precision performance products.

It's rocket science brought down to earth.

Aeromotive Fuel Filter - Replacement Filters: Keep your Aeromotive Fuel Filter running in tip top shape with Aeromotive Replacement Filters.

Honda shift cut threat to 340 jobs

Tue, 25 Mar 2014

JAPANESE car giant Honda is to cut production at its UK factory from three shifts to two, threatening 340 jobs. Most cars built at the plant in Swindon, Wiltshire, are exported and sales in other countries have not been as strong as in the UK. "Over the last 12 months, we haven't seen the growth we'd anticipated.

Daihatsu Kopen concept: changeable body panels

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Wondering what all the fuss is about the interchangeable body panels on the new Daihatsu Kopen concept at the 2013 Tokyo Motor Show? Hopefully this will help it make a little more sense. As you can see from our montage image, Daihatsu has designed the Kopen concept with a kind of non-structural spaceframe.

Post-World War II Japanese tin toys on display in New York

Fri, 14 Aug 2009

During the rebuilding of Japan after World War II, a Japanese toy designer took a discarded tin can and molded it into an intricate model car. Just inches in length, it created a phenomenon in the 1940s and '50s in Japan called “buriki.” Buriki is derived from “blik,” which is Dutch for "tin toy." A collection of 70 tin-toy vehicles manufactured in Japan is currently on display at New York's Japan Society Gallery. The exhibit, called “Buriki: Japanese Tin Toys from the Golden Age of the American Automobile, The Yoku Tanaka Collection,” runs until Aug.