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Stx Sts Zxi Ss Xi 650 750 800 900 1100 14069-3708 Bilge Breather Elbow on 2040-parts.com

US $9.95
Location:

North Tonawanda, New York, United States

North Tonawanda, New York, United States
Condition:Used Brand:Kawasaki Country/Region of Manufacture:Japan Manufacturer Part Number:14069-3706 ts sc xir ultra 150 130 stxr 12f 15f di

Ruf XL: A longer Porsche Panamera for the Chinese market

Wed, 18 Jan 2012

The Chinese love their rear-seat legroom. The workhorse of Shanghai taxi fleets is an extended-wheelbase Volkswagen called the Santana; think 1980s Quantum with longer rear doors. Audi's Chinese division designed and builds a long-wheelbase version of the last-generation A6.

Volkswagen Golf [w/Gallery]

Wed, 05 Sep 2012

Volkswagen has unveiled the new seventh-generation Golf in Berlin, 36 years after the original model was first released. As expected the Mk7 is a further evolution of the Golf lineage, adding what appears to be an extra layer of precision to its surfacing and graphics. New production techniques helped the design team reduce its weight by 100kg, and at 4,255mm long the new model is 56mm longer than its predecessor, with a 59mm longer wheelbase of 2,637mm and it is also 13mm wider, at 1,799mm, and 28mm lower at 1,452mm.

First Sight: Mercedes-Benz SL

Sun, 08 Jan 2012

The new high-tech, low weight Mercedes SL roadster receives its official global unveil next week in Detroit but Car Design News got an early peek of the final production car and had a chat with its designers at Mercedes' US advanced design studio in Carlsbad, California back in November. "We want to get back to clean, long-lasting design," director of Mercedes global advanced design and SL project leader, Steffen Kohl told CDN at the exclusive preview of the sixth-generation model. "So the new SL is long, sleek and still full of tension in the feature lines but less wedgy." In a short presentation Kohl felt all SLs became successfully iconic in their times because they followed two key rules – ‘sensuality' and ‘cleanness' – but alluded that the first rule may have been lost in more recent eras.