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Garmin Cadence Sensor - Bike Sensor To Monito Pedaling Cadence In Black on 2040-parts.com

US $32.50
Location:

Condition:New other (see details)A new, unused item with absolutely no signs of wear. The item may be missing the original packaging, or in the original packaging but not sealed. The item may be a factory second or a new, unused item with defects. See the seller’s listing for full details and description of any imperfections. See all condition definitions Seller Notes:“Everything was found to be in the packaging as originally made by manufacturer. I cut the tape on the device and re-taped it because I didn't think everything was there. It is considered NEW.” Read Less Brand:Garmin Type:Cadence Sensor Color:Black Manufacturer Part Number:010-12102-00 Colour:Black UPC:753759120627

One-on-one with Ron Dennis, McLaren's boss

Mon, 19 Apr 2010

Here are a few stats to wrap your brain around: Since 1966, the year McLaren got into Formula One, 100 Grand Prix teams have come and gone--100! Only Ferrari and McLaren remain. McLaren has won 25 percent of the F1 races it has entered and has been on the podium a whopping 53 percent of the time.

Pagani Zonda F Cinque – er, no it’s not!

Fri, 06 Mar 2009

The mysterious 'Zonda F Cinque' - which is actually a Regular Zonda Cinque But we are still to see the Zonda Cinque (which is essentially a tamed-down Zonda R for the road) in the wild, and probably because of that the car sites around the world were full of a mysterious ‘Zonda F Cinque’ that was going to turn up at the Geneva Motor Show. But we had our doubts. We have pretty good contacts at Pagani, and although we knew that the Pagani coming to Geneva was in fact the Cinque (as well as the Zonda R) we wanted to work out where the rumour came from.

Ford teams up with Heinz for tomato car parts

Wed, 11 Jun 2014

Ford and Getty Images Forget carbonfibre, the new must-have material on your vehicle will soon be tomato fibre – or so Ford and food manufacturer Heinz are hoping. The American carmaker and the food giant have teamed up to "explore the use of tomato fibre to develop a sustainable bio-plastic material for vehicles," bringing environmentally friendly motoring to a whole new level. Ford and Heinz tomato car parts: how will they work?