Hel Stainless Braided Rear Brake Lines Hoses For Mini Cooper R50 04/2001-04/2003 on 2040-parts.com
Performance Brake Lines for Sale
Maserati gransport stainless steel braided brake lines (m138) 04-07(US $)
Maserati gransport front rear brake lines hoses - stainless steel (m138) 04-07(US $)
Allstar performance braided #4 s/s flex brake hoses x 4 12 inches & 18 inches(US $25.00)
Omp racing pedal covers rally silver worldwide(US $50.00)
Omp racing pedal covers rally silver worldwide(US $27.00)
Hel performance rear subframe hard line replacement mazda mx5 mk1 mk2(US $)
Mercedes A45 AMG – with Lewis Hamilton & Nico Rosberg (video)
Mon, 20 May 2013That lump is a 2.0 litre turbo 4-cylinder that produces a not insignificant 355bhp and 332lb/ft of torque, which is enough to get the pocket rocket A45 to 62mph in a competition busting 4.6 seconds. And with the A45 AMG heading towards Mercedes showrooms soon, MB are bust promoting their new hot hatch, and what better way to do that than rope in your own highly paid F1 drivers to add a bit of performance gloss? So Mercedes has put Lewis Hamilton behind the wheel of an A45, Nico Rosberg in the passenger seat and a ‘Good Fairy’ in the road to sort out arguments about who should get to drive.
Aston Martin Rapide coming home
Tue, 07 Jun 2011Aston Martin Rapide - homeward bound It took Aston Martin what seemed like forever to get their four-door supercar – the Aston Martin Rapide – in to production, and even then they didn’t build it themselves. When they were busy planning production of the Rapide the world’s economy was buoyant, credit was a piece of cake and Aston Martins were flying out of the showroom. But the new economic reality bit in 2008 and sales fell at Aston Martin, but by then the plan to get the Rapide built at Magna Steyr in Austria was unstoppable so, despite Aston Martin workers twiddling their thumbs as Magna Steyr built Rapides, there as nothing to be done.
1961 Jaguar E-Type ‘Barn Find’ sells for £110k
Fri, 03 May 2013Rarity is all in the classic car world, which is one of the reasons why the early, pre-Fiat Ferraris command huge prices (there were only 33 Series 1 Ferrari 250 GTOs built and you would now have to pay north of $40 million for one) and why the E-Type – glorious and desirable though it is – commands a fraction of that. In fact, you can pick up a very decent E-Type in good condition for as little as £50k, and even E-Types that have been fully restored and with low mileage don’t often break the £100k barrier. So why has this tatty 1961 flat-floor E-Type sold for £119,020 at Bonhams auction at the RAF Museum in Hendon?



