Dorman Cm640106 Clutch Master Cylinder on 2040-parts.com
Minneapolis, Minnesota, US
Clutches & Parts for Sale
Luk 07-048 clutch-clutch kit(US $91.81)
Dorman h36966 clutch hose(US $11.01)
Dorman cm39803 clutch master cylinder(US $35.22)
Dorman cm350041 clutch master cylinder(US $53.75)
Dorman cs133739 clutch slave cylinder assy-clutch slave cylinder(US $27.86)
Ram force 10.5 twin-plate clutch kit 80-2260n(US $1,377.97)
New York City Taxi of Tomorrow plans hit a roadblock
Thu, 10 Oct 2013New York City administration's plan to replace current taxi cabs with the specially developed Nissan Taxi of Tomorrow has been stymied by a recent legal decision, the Wall Street Journal is reporting. The New York State Supreme Court in Manhattan (it's a bit confusing, but this is actually the on the level of the lowest state courts in New York state's court system) has issued a decision which determined the project to be an overreach of executive authority, siding with taxi magnate Evgeny Freidman and the Greater New York Taxi Association. The court stated that city's Taxi and Limousine Commission lacked the authority to compel cab companies to purchase the any particular vehicle -- in this case, the Nissan NV200 Taxi, which was slated to hit streets just a couple weeks from now on Oct.
2009s Fastest cars 0 to 60 mph: The AutoWeek list
Thu, 05 Mar 2009Bugatti Veyron 16.4 0 to 60 mph: 2.6 sec (est) Base price: $1,500,000 Our take: The holy grail of power, the Veyron boasts more than 1,000 hp with four turbos. Lamborghini LP670-4 Superveloce 0 to 60 mph: 3.1 sec (est) Base price: TBA Our take: Soon to be released, the Superveloce promises to be the fastest bull ever. Koenigsegg CCX 0 to 60 mph: 3.1 sec Base price: $912,137 Our take: With CCX standing for Competition Coupe X, the Swedish Koenigsegg boasts more than 850 hp and a top speed of 245 mph.
Lotus not liquidating
Mon, 18 Mar 2013When a storied car brand moves only 137 units in a year in the UK and 242 in the US, predictions of said marque's demise carry a certain amount of weight -- 137 is not exactly a number that makes an automaker too big to fail. When the manufacturer in question shows up on a government list of companies to be shut down, brand-enthusiast hearts get heavy; the early stages of mourning kick in. But when the company in question is Lotus, the enthusiast thinks to himself, “Eh, they've been in dire straits before.




