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Ultraflex B103 Control Box/sgl Lvr/bncl Mt/ch on 2040-parts.com

US $300.00
Location:

Clovis, California, United States

Clovis, California, United States
Condition:New Brand:ULTRAFLEX Manufacturer Part Number:B103

NEW IN BOX WITH ALL MOUNTING HARDWARE AND GASKET ALL ORIGINAL PACKAGING  I AM HOWEVER GOING TO ADD PADDING BEFORE I SHIP TO BE SAFE

Spyker & Youngman D8 SUV & Phoenix Joint Venture

Mon, 27 Aug 2012

Spyker and China’s Youngman are launching joint ventures to build the Spyker D8 SUV and develop the Saab Phoenix platform. Did you really think Victor Muller would come out of Saab with nothing? Especially after he told is in April he was looking for investors to push the Spyker D8 SSUV in to production? Muller’s Spyker and China’s Youngman – putative seller and buyer of Saab – are teaming up with a pair of joint ventures that will see Spyker’s long awaited Super SUV – the once D12 SUV and now D8 – coming to market, and Saab’s Phoenix Platform exploited.

2015 Porsche Cayenne facelift revealed – new 410bhp plug-in S E-Hybrid & new V6 Turbo

Thu, 24 Jul 2014

The Porsche Cayenne gets a facelift for 2015 The Porsche Cayenne is the best on-road SUV by far, and it gets even better with the launch of the 2015 model year Cayenne which gets a subtle – but effective – cosmetic makeover and some big changes in powertrain options. New to the Cayenne – and replacing the S Hybrid – is the Cayenne S E-Hybrid. It keeps the same Audi-sourced 3.0 litre V6 petrol engine as the outgoing hybrid, which has 328bhp and 325lb/ft of torque, and mates it to a new electric motor delivering 94bhp for a total of 410bhp and 434lb/ft of torque.

Could Coffee Kick Start Your Car?

Tue, 17 Jun 2014

NEXT time you’re reaching for the coffee in a bid to kick start your day, in the future the popular beverage could also power your drive to work. In a new development, scientists have made biofuel from ground coffee produced in 20 different geographic regions - including caffeinated and decaffeinated forms. New research from the University of Bath suggests waste coffee grounds could be a "sustainable fuel source" for powering vehicles.