Mas Industries T2221 Outer Tie Rod End on 2040-parts.com
Temecula, California, US
Tie Rod Linkages for Sale
Mas industries t2246 outer tie rod end(US $24.54)
Mas industries t2144 outer tie rod end(US $24.38)
Mas industries t2120 outer tie rod end(US $26.15)
Mas industries t2046 inner tie rod end(US $25.28)
Mas industries t2127 outer tie rod end(US $27.97)
Mas industries t2139 outer tie rod end(US $29.24)
The thinking man’s M3: Alpina D3 Bi-Turbo is world’s fastest diesel production car
Thu, 10 Oct 2013German tuning firm Alpina has been tweaking BMWs since it started back in 1965 – in fact, it helped BMW develop the legendary 3.0 CSL, so it seems it knows its onions. However, its latest effort is something a little different. Not quite a conventional performance car, the 2013 Alpina D3 Bi-Turbo is actually the world’s fastest diesel production car, according to the firm.
McLaren announces official P1 performance figures (2013)
Mon, 21 Oct 2013By Ollie Kew First Official Pictures 21 October 2013 14:00 McLaren has finally finished throat-clearing about the P1 supercar, and announced official, confirmed performance figures for the £866,000 hyper-hybrid. No more ‘approximately’ this and ‘sub’ that: here’s the complete list of top trumps. • 0-62mph (100km/h): 2.8sec – the same as a Nissan GT-R, 0.1sec faster than a Lamborghini Aventador, and 0.4sec faster than the original McLaren F1.• 0-124mph (200km/h): 6.8sec – faster than CAR’s long-term Subaru BRZ coupe hits 62mph.• 0-186mph (300km/h): 15.6sec – 5.5sec faster than a McLaren F1.
Jaguar Land Rover sales drive Tata Motors’ profit
Tue, 14 Feb 2012JLR strong sales drive Tata Motors profits Jaguar Land Rover sales rose 41 per cent in the last quarter to £3.75 billion with profits of £440 million, propping up Tata’s domestic decline. When Tata bought Jaguar Land Rover from Ford back in 2008 for $2.3 billion it offered promise for the future, but most analysts thought Tata had made a big mistake buying JLR for so much, just as the world economy started to slip ion to the near depression we’re still fighting. But the analysts were wrong.
