Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Flowmaster 17471 American Thunder Cat Back Exhaust System Fits 87-96 F-150 on 2040-parts.com

US $509.97
Location:

San Diego, California, United States

San Diego, California, United States
Condition:New Brand:Flowmaster Surface Finish:Brand New Manufacturer Part Number:17471 Warranty:Yes Interchange Part Number:17471 Country/Region of Manufacture:United States Other Part Number:Flow Master Exhaust 17471 Seller SKU:BDXN17471

Think brings four-seat City car to Europe

Tue, 21 Dec 2010

UPDATED -- The latest-generation Think City electric car gets 2+2 seating for the first time, and it goes on sale across Europe this month. Think representatives said it is unknown when or if the four-seater will be sold in the United States. Currently, Think is only making fleet deliveries from its U.S.

The Porsche P1 is lighter, greener and more exclusive than McLaren's new hypercar

Mon, 27 Jan 2014

Long before the legendary Porsche 911 -- before, even, the Porsche 356 -- Ferdinand Porsche was tinkering with alternative powertrains and designing road-worthy vehicles. Though it wasn't the first vehicle to bear his name, the “Egger-Lohner electric vehicle, C.2 Phaeton model” was the earliest result of his efforts. Perhaps getting the jump on the modern alpha-numeric craze/plague, it was shortened to a simple “P1.” The P1 (we'll refer to it as the Porsche P1 from here on out to avoid confusion) made its first appearance in Vienna on June 26, 1898, and it didn't last long in the public eye: Before Porsche decided to pull it out and put it on display, it had reportedly been sitting in a warehouse, untouched, since 1902.

Nissan’s new lightweight philosophy revealed

Wed, 28 Oct 2009

The leaked official drawings of the new Nissan Micra might have revealed the conventional styling of the company’s new supermini, but they gave little clue to the dramatically lightweight new platform that underpins it. The new Micra will be significantly lighter and more fuel efficient than the outgoing car due to a ruthless pursuit of weight reduction on the new V-platform (V = versatile), which on average has slashed 50kg from the new car's weight, and up to 70kg on some models. Project leader Noritaka Tsuru described the new package as a 'breakthrough car' that required a complete 'change in mentality' in how Nissan makes cars.