Smoke Black-out Taillight Tint Smoked Head Fog Tail Light Tinted Vinyl Film A on 2040-parts.com
Los Angeles, US
Headlight & Tail Light Covers for Sale
- Left headlamp door head light bezel driver side 1985-1988 chevrolet gmc(US $20.68)
- Bmw 3-series e46 4dr sedan facelift headlight lamp cover trim eyelids eyebrows ☜(US $32.00)
- Right headlamp door head light passenger side 1989-1991 chevrolet blazer(US $23.40)
- 4 x invisible clear adhesive car door handle paint scratch protection bra vinyl(US $4.99)
- Right headlamp door head light passenger side 1992-1996 ford econoline(US $23.00)
- Vw headlight rings bezel, beetle, bus, thing, pair volkswagen 1967-1979 (new)(US $18.50)
Hyundai i30 3-Door looks good: Paris 2012
Fri, 28 Sep 2012The public debut of the slightly racy looking Hyundai i30 3-Door at the Paris 2012 shows it to be a convincing looking car. Sleeker and more sporty looking than its five door sibling, the 3-door i30 (we’ve said it before, it should be i30 Coupe) offers all the well-built, well thought out and decent looks of the 5-door version, but with a bit more panache. What it’s crying out for, though, is something a bit more interesting under the bonnet and the option of some nice alloys and a few subtle body modifications; perhaps a small spoiler at the back, some subtly bigger sills, more butch bumpers and a small ride height drop?
McLaren F1 – The perfect safe haven in troubled times
Tue, 27 Jan 2009The McLaren F1 (along with its ‘Super’ brother, the LM) is considered by many to be the ultimate road car. Light, fast and enormously desirable, the F1 has been a stunning success story. Initially conceived in the late ’80s, and coming to fruition with the launch of the first road car in 1995, just 65 road-going F1s where made between 1995 and 1998, with 5 further LMs (6 if you count the prototype, which is still owned by McLaren and promised to Lewis Hamilton if he pulls of the double World Championship by winning in 2009).
'Get tough on killer drivers' call
Fri, 21 Mar 2014DRIVERS who cause death on the roads should be jailed for at least five years, according to the majority of motorists. Eighty-two per cent reckon sentences should be higher for those drivers who kill, a survey by road safety charity Brake and insurance company Direct Line found. Brake said the latest Government figures showed 62% of those convicted of killing someone through risky driving were jailed and only 9% got sentences of five years or more.