Standard Motor Products Pvs87 Ported Vacuum Switch on 2040-parts.com
Temecula, California, US
Other for Sale
Standard motor products ks138 knock sensor(US $153.41)
Standard motor products ks110 knock sensor(US $139.33)
Standard motor products pvs80 ported vacuum switch(US $38.09)
Airtex 5s2429 manifold absolute pressure sensor(US $122.97)
Standard motor products pvs54 ported vacuum switch(US $36.12)
Standard motor products ks57 knock sensor(US $58.65)
Unbelievable SSC Ultimate Aero EV
Thu, 22 Jan 2009Prius was an easy way out for celebs who didn’t want their ‘Public’ to think them flash Jacks, but they always had a Cayenne Turbo or a Lamborghini LP640 tucked away in the garage. But the rise of cars like the Tesla, despite its drawbacks, has pushed the maker of the world’s fastest production car, the Ultimate Aero SSC, to look at ways to keep their clientèle happy in these changing times. SSC must feel there is a danger their market may disappear if truly powerful and appealing cars appear that are perceived as green and start to take over the marketplace.
Infiniti Q30 concept (2013) at Frankfurt motor show
Tue, 27 Aug 2013We’ve seen the design sketch of the new Infiniti Q30, and now here’s the first picture of the idea made real: it’s the Q30 concept car that’ll attend the Frankfurt motor show in September. Infiniti Q30 concept: what’s the story? Infiniti is busting three niches in one with the Q30: we’re told the car’s body is a fusion ‘merging the dynamic design and sportiness of a coupe, the roominess of a hatch and the higher stance of a crossover’.
Video: Michael Mauer on the 991-series Porsche 911
Tue, 08 May 2012Porsche has released a video featuring its Design Director, Michael Mauer, explaining how he and his team went about redesigning the 911, an ‘automotive, engineering icon' as he describes it. "What we as designers are striving to above all is to optimize the width to height ratio with the result that although the 911's width has not increased, the front axle area has become wider, and we've managed to make the roof a bit lower," Mauer explains via a rather dramatic-sounding voiceover.