Sparco H-8 Endurance 6-point Fhr Harness Seat Belt Black Fia 8853-2016 Approved on 2040-parts.com
Safety Belts & Harnesses for Sale
R.j.s. safety equipment 1131003 5-point latch and link racing harness blue(US $109.99)
Rjs racing equipment 1034909 5-point cam-lock racing harness green(US $161.69)
Grant 2110 latch and link safety harness - 5 point with 3in. straps - black(US $147.63)
Simpson safety black latch and link 5 point harness black- 29064bk(US $50.00)
Beard seats 5 point safety harness with sub strap 2"x2" latch and link(US $69.99)
Rjs 16001901 - latch and link shoulder harness(US $66.99)
Chevrolet Corvette Stingray Convertible (2013) first official pictures
Tue, 05 Mar 2013You wait ages for a new Corvette, and then six weeks after the new Stingray bows in at the 2013 Detroit atuo show, its soft-top sister is revealed at the Geneva motor show. The latest C7-generation Corvette drop-top uses the same mechanical package (big V8 up front, power sent to the rear wheels) as its fixed-head sister but adds an electrically-folding soft-top roof that you can lower remotely via pushing a button on the key fob. You can also drop the roof while on the move, at speed of up to 31mph.
Chevrolet and Disney develop virtual design experience
Mon, 12 Nov 2012Chevrolet designers and Disney ‘Imagineers' will offer Walt Disney World Resort guests a glimpse inside a professional design studio. After 18 months of collaboration in the fields of industrial, automotive design to architecture and animation, visitors will be immersed in a multi-sensory virtual experience. The experience gives visitors the chance to create their own designs – cars, trucks or crossovers – with some help from Chevrolet designers before test driving it on virtual track surfaces that imitate the real performance tests.
America trialling solar-powered roads
Wed, 14 May 2014Solar Roadways After glow-in-the-dark road markings proved to be a bit of a flop when the paint washed away in the rain, experts are now experimenting with solar-powered motorways. A small, family-owned American company based in Idaho called Solar Roadways has created a short section of road that uses the sun’s energy to power nearby buildings, as well as electric cars. If the solar-powered roads are adopted worldwide, it could put an end to the range-anxiety commonly associated with electric vehicles.
