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Harley Davidson Fender Tip on 2040-parts.com

US $70.00
Location:

San Ramon, California, US

San Ramon, California, US
Returns Accepted:ReturnsNotAccepted Part Brand:National Cycle Manufacturer Part Number:84948 Placement on Vehicle:Array Surface Finish:Chrome Warranty:No Country of Manufacture:United States

Rear Fender tip for Harley Davidson Heritage springer. Cast metal. Not stamped. '90-00 FLSTF & '97-05 FLSTS. I just purchased it thinking it was for the front. never been installed. I just took it out of the package. It may fit other model. Let me know if you have any questions.

Volvo creates Inflatable Child Seat

Mon, 14 Apr 2014

Volvo is a brand famously associated with safety, so let’s hope its latest effort doesn’t turn out to be a load of hot air: the Swedish brand has come up with a concept for an inflatable children’s car seat. Called the Volvo Inflatable Child Seat Concept, this does exactly what it says on the tin – it’s a child seat that instead of being made of rigid material can be deflated and folded away for easy carriage when not required. On Bing: see pictures of the Volvo Inflatable Child Seat Concept Find out how much a used Volvo costs on Auto Trader Noting that “children’s car seats are historically bulky, hard to move and tedious to mount,” Volvo says its new rear-facing inflatable alternative weighs just 5kg – half the weight of an equivalent conventional model.

Mercedes-Benz inaugurates Advanced Design Studio in Beijing, China

Fri, 22 Jul 2011

Mercedes-Benz inaugurated its global Advanced Design Center in Beijing, China, yesterday, Thursday July 21. The Beijing design center, Daimler's fifth advanced design studio worldwide, further reinforces the growing importance of the Chinese auto market and Beijing in particular; the city is increasingly influencing changing needs and trends. The new 1,000 square meter Advanced Design Studio employs a total of around 20 designers who will contribute to the future design of Mercedes-Benz automobiles, competing and working with the company's other studios in Germany, Italy, Japan and the USA.

What's different about electric cars this time? A column by Kevin A. Wilson

Thu, 05 Mar 2009

Thirteen years after the General Motors EV1 was rolled out to cheers from advocates of a revolution in the way we power automobiles, those same advocates are out front cheerleading yet another revival of an idea as old as the automobile itself: Run 'em on batteries. Batteries aren't a source of energy. They're just storage units, a convenient means of making power portable.