Gabriel G63422 - Ultra™ Premium Rear Driver Or Passenger Side Twin-tube Shock on 2040-parts.com
Shocks & Struts for Sale
Mercedes (2010-2011) shock absorber rear left driver side bilstein b4 + warranty(US $531.00)
Mercedes (2010-2011) shock absorber rear right passenger side bilstein b4(US $531.00)
Shock absorbers rear pair for jeep commander 2005-2010 grand cherokee 3.7l v6(US $38.10)
Rear shocks struts absorber pair set for acura mdx 1999-2004 honda pilot odyssey(US $32.60)
39052 rear shocks struts for pontiac aztek 2001-2005 buick rendezvous 2002-2007(US $35.46)
Front air suspension valve block rvh000095 for range rover land sport lr3 4.(US $78.52)
VW Scirocco GTS launches – but not in UK
Sun, 21 Oct 2012There’s a new Scirocco available across Europe from this month – the VW Scirocco GTS – but it’s not coming to the UK. The GTS is more of a trim level than a stand-alone model and you can grab it with a variety of engines – 1.4 litre TSI, 2.0 litre TSI and 2.0 litre TDI – as the GTS trim just adds cosmetic tweaks to the Scirocco and nothing in the way of power or performance upgrades. Those cosmetic tweaks amount to thumping great black stripes up the bonnet bordered by thinner red stripes (which all continues over the top and down the back of the GTS), red covers for the door mirrors, 18″ alloys, a spoiler at the back (nicked from the Scirocco R) and a more butch back bumper with diffuser.
Audi RS5 engine confirmed, plus RS5 cabrio
Wed, 13 May 2009By Tim Pollard (artist's impression by Radovan Varicak) Motor Industry 13 May 2009 13:44 Audi will fit a refettled naturally aspirated 4.2-litre V8 to its secret new RS5, CAR can confirm. We had previously reported the RS5 would use a twin-turbo iteration of this engine, but a senior source has told us it will not feature forced induction. We’re told it’s the same high-revving engine that powered the outgoing RS4, albeit spruced up with the latest Ingolstadt know-how.
Top Gear 'for inner nine-yea-old'
Tue, 28 Jan 2014THE BOSS of BBC hit Top Gear says the presenters' childish antics are a success because they are a "release valve" for the increasing stresses of our working lives. Executive producer Andy Wilman said the programmes helped viewers to reconnect with their nine-year-old selves because life for adults is "bloody hard". In an interview with Radio Times, he also bemoaned the constraints of the workplace, which could be seen as a swipe at the strict levels of compliance which apply to BBC TV shows.




