Cushman 735 Golfster Hood Latch Emblem on 2040-parts.com
Concord, North Carolina, United States
Golf Car Cables & Parts for Sale
Starter generator belt for yamaha g16-g22 gas golf carts(US $16.99)
Club car ds golf cart (1979-up) bronze front lower flanged spindle bushing 642(US $10.50)
Set of spark plug wire set for cushman ezgo nos(US $80.00)
E z go golf cart part forward reverse contact board 1971-up electric series(US $35.00)
For yamaha drive g29 new golf cart front clay utility cargo basket(US $99.99)
Rear shock absorber for club car ds gas golf carts 1984-1996(US $43.50)
Euro NCAP tests for C4, Swift, CR-Z and iX35
Wed, 25 Aug 2010The results from the latest round of Euro NCAP crash tests are in, and - surprise, surprise - every car tested came away with a maximum five-star safety rating. The new Citroen C4, Suzuki Swift, Honda CR-Z hybrid and Hyundai iX35 were all put through their paces, and each passed with flying colours. The latest results, while highlighting how far car safety has come in recent years (remember the notorious Rover 100 fiasco of 1997?), are bound to reignite the growing debate that the tests - or at least the marks awarded - need to show more differentiation between models.
Subaru XV Concept (2011) first official pictures
Tue, 19 Apr 2011This is the Subaru XV crossover concept, unveiled today at the 2011 Shanghai motor show. The Subaru XV is definitely not an SUV, is it? No, the XV is Subaru's idea of an Impreza-based compact crossover hatchback.
Drink-and-drive deaths down in 2007
Fri, 08 Aug 2008By Tom Richards Motor Industry 08 August 2008 12:08 The latest figures from the Department for Transport show the number of people killed in drink-driving accidents in the UK fell in 2007. According to the data the number of fatal accidents dropped by 16 percent from 2006 to 2007 (from 490 to 410), while the number of deaths in these accidents fell 18 percent (down to 460 in 2007 from 650 in 2006). But while the number of deaths is going down, hospitals are still being kept busy as drink-drive casualties rose from 11,840 in 2006 to 12,260 in 2007, a jump of four percent.




