One New Upper Left Rear Control Arm Dorman 521-165 on 2040-parts.com
Ronkonkoma, New York, US
Control Arms & Parts for Sale
Godspeed 240sx s13 s14 front+rear lower control arm free shipping(US $480.00)
One new lower right control arm dorman 521-038(US $139.98)
Megan rear traction rods kit 01-06 lexus ls430/ ls 430 all suspension adjustable(US $334.99)
Moog k8169 suspension control arm bushing ( only 1 bushing )(US $6.99)
Megan racing rear lower toe arms 95-98 nissan 240sx s14 silvia sr20 ka24(US $114.99)
1996-2000 honda civic dx/lx/ex/si ek silver front upper camber control arm kit(US $57.99)
CAR interviews Porsche's R&D boss Wolfgang Durheimer (2011)
Tue, 01 Feb 2011Dr Wolfgang Durheimer starts his new job today; previously Porsche’s R&D chief, Dr Durheimer takes up his post as boss of Bentley and Bugatti on 1 February 2011. Just before he left Porsche, CAR caught up with Dr Durheimer to discover the future he’s leaving behind at the German sports car manufacturer. Dr Durheimer begain his career in the auto industry in 1986, working for BMW as a product manager, product development boss for the Motorrad division, and then as R&D boss.
Porsche 911 GT3 R Hybrid at the Nurburgring – Video
Wed, 28 Apr 2010The Porsche 911 GT3 R Hybrid Nurburgring video below In February we reported that Porsche has developed the unthinkable – a hybrid 911. But this wasn’t a hybrid 911 with a bank of batteries and a fluffy-bunny conscience, but a rampant track 911 with a great big electro-magnetic flywheel and a KERS-like thump of an extra 160bhp – the Porsche 911 GT3 R Hybrid. The 911 GT3 R uses technology developed by Williams F1 and comprises of a pair of generators in the front wheels that shove energy to a composite flywheel (conveniently located next to the driver – not sure how well that would go down on a road0going version) which is the stored and can be thrown at the back wheels whenever the driver wants, in a way very similar to KERS.
Paul Walker crash 'caused by speed'
Wed, 26 Mar 2014CRASH INVESTIGATORS have determined that the Porsche carrying "Fast & Furious" star Paul Walker was travelling at approximately 90mph when it lost control on a California street and smashed into a light pole, killing the actor and his friend. A person who has reviewed the investigators' report said that it concluded unsafe driving, not mechanical problems, caused the crash. The report says driver Roger Rodas was going between 81mph and 94mph when his 2005 Porsche Carrera GT began to drift as it lost control after coming out of a curve.
