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Factorykiss Rear Seat Cover Cowl For Honda Cbr1000rr Cbr 08-09 Blue on 2040-parts.com

US $25.31
Location:

Hong Kong, HK

Hong Kong, HK
Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Refund will be given as:Money back or exchange (buyer's choice) Item must be returned within:30 Days Return policy details:Please contact us if you have any issue regarding your purchase. We will try our best to help. Thank you. Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Restocking Fee:No Warranty:Yes Part Type:Body & Frame Body & Frame Part Type:Seats Part By Region:Asian Make:Honda

Lamborghini Huracan racks up 700 orders ahead of a Geneva debut

Thu, 13 Feb 2014

The new Lamborghini Huracan (pictured) secures 700 orders before a public debut The new Lamborghini Huracan – the long-awaited replacement for the Lamborghini Gallardo – was revealed just before Christmas and has been doing a tour of private reveals to Lamborghini faithful around the world. Those private presentations look like they’ve been quite a success, with Lamborghini reporting 700 secured orders for the Huracan already – half the average annual orders of the Gallardo in just a month – before it’s even been publicly revealed. With styling that owes more than a passing nod to the Aventador, 602bhp from its 5.2 litre V10 and 4WD, the Huracan is an appealing mid-engined supercar from Lamborghini, especially has Lamborghini seem to have worked hard to increase the quality of construction and materials used.

Nissan GT-R import fears

Mon, 03 Dec 2007

By Motor Industry 03 December 2007 09:43 Bargain hunters rejoice! Nissan's new GT-R costs just £34,400 in Japan - spelling out juicy savings for grey importers in the UK, where the super-coupe is tipped to cost £60,000. Even after the cost of shipping and import duties, that means you could land a Japanese-spec car for around £42-£45k.

Saab plea for Court Protection dismissed – owes €150 million to creditors

Thu, 08 Sep 2011

Saab denied Court Protection - there seems no way out We hoped Victor Muller had found a way out of Saab’s financial woes by applying to the Swedish Courts for protection from its creditors while it waited for funds from China to arrive. But the application has hit a brick wall. The district court in Vanersborg said in a statement that there was no reason to believe protection and reorganisation would work for Saab.