Antennas for Sale
Antenna gsm/umts, 1450 mm, gps 1480 mm genuine mercedes 957 - a9069054800(US $59.52)
Easy to install portable fm radio antenna extension cable for car 50cm length(US $9.91)
Nissan qashqai j11 keyless entry aerial antenna amplifier amp 5wk48774 2015(US $)
2006 06 mercedes clk350 convertible driver left antenna amp a2098201589 103260(US $84.00)
Ford edge 2011 antenna 1418611(US $65.00)
Infiniti q50 2017 sat nav navigation gps antenna module unit(US $)
Renaultsport R.S. 01 race car revealed by Renault
Wed, 27 Aug 2014Renaultsport R.S. 01 race car revealed by Renault Heading for the Renault World Series Championship next year, the Renaultsport R.S. 01 has been unveiled this morning by Renault as a race car that sits between a GT3 sports car and DTM race car in terms of performance.
Adaptive steering for big Fords arrives on new Edge
Fri, 30 May 2014By Tim Pollard Motoring Issues 30 May 2014 17:43 Ford today announced all its future large cars will have adaptive steering as standard - letting reps flick their wrists on the way in to the Welcome Break on the M4, yet tip their fingers when changing lanes on the London orbital. It's a further sign that what was once the high-tech preserve of the German brands is now firmly in the mainstream. BMW was one of the brands which pioneered variable-ratio power steering; in essence, it changes the ratio between the driver's inputs at the wheel and the rate at which turns are made at the rack.
Record breaking Bluebird reunited with nose
Fri, 13 Dec 2013WORLD LAND SPEED RECORD holder Sir Malcolm Campbell’s Bluebird CN7 car has been reunited with its original nose. The car’s original nose was damaged and then kept in Coventry since 1960, but it has now been brought back to the car that lives at the National Motor Museum at Beaulieu, Hampshire. Damaged during a World Land Speed Record attempt on the Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah, USA, the nose of the car was sent back to Coventry for repairs and an updated design to help make the car more stable at very high speeds.
