Harley Davidson Black Frame Willie G Skull Sunglasses on 2040-parts.com
U.S.A, US
Eye Wear for Sale
Bomber cherry bomb polarized floating black sunglasses(US $24.99)
Birdz seahawk polarized sunglasses floating water sport(US $32.99)
Clear lenses foam padded motorcycle biker atv boating safety folding goggles(US $15.95)
Polarized foam padded motorcycle biker atv boating safety riding sunglasses (US $21.95)
Bobster caliber interchangeable sunglasses black smoke(US $26.98)
Bomber b-52 polarized floating matte black sunglasses(US $24.99)
Nissan LEAF: First UK deliveries
Mon, 21 Mar 2011Mark Goodier gets the first Nissan LEAF delivered in the UK It’s taken a while, but Nissan has finally got the Nissan LEAF on the road in the UK, with the first two customers picking up their cars this morning. Nissan dealers Glyn Hopkin in Waltham Abbey had a pair of nice, shiny, black Nissan LEAFs all prepped and ready to go this morning to the first two UK customers – DJ Mark Goodier and electronics engineer Richard Todd. Mark Goodier – once a Radio 1 key player but now out to pasture at Smooth FM – was the first to drive off in his LEAF, subsequently commenting on Twitter that “…I had a great smooth drive into London today”.
TIV-2 takes the fight to the tornado
Fri, 05 Aug 2011It takes a special breed of person to be a storm chaser. It takes an extra-special truck to withstand the 220-mph winds that tornadoes produce. The 14,000-pound TIV-2 is just such a vehicle.
GM 'will lose money' on the new Chevrolet Volt
Thu, 18 Sep 2008By Ben Whitworth Motor Industry 18 September 2008 14:39 Despite hanging its future on the make-or-break Chevrolet Volt plug-in hybrid car, GM has confirmed that it doesn’t expect to make a profit from it – at least not on the first-generation model. The Chevy Volt was unveiled this week amid much hoopla at GM's centenary. 'I don’t know that I’ve ever seen a situation where we make money, particularly when you load all the costs in,' Fritz Henderson, GM’s chief operating officer, told Automotive News Europe, referring to the company’s first-generation technologies.
