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Arctic Cat F1100 Turbo 09-16 Z1 Lxr Xf Procross Zr 9000 Front Plastic Nose Cone on 2040-parts.com

US $138.00
Location:

Rockford, Michigan, United States

Rockford, Michigan, United States
Condition:Used

For sale is a nose cone removed from a 2012 Arctic Cat 1100 Turbo.  It is in good working condition and had 300 miles on it when removed.

Complete Snowmobile Engines for Sale

Ford Focus RS confirmed

Mon, 17 Dec 2007

By First Official Pictures 17 December 2007 12:46 The on-again, off-again Ford Focus RS is now definitely on again. During a press event at the Race of Champions last night, Ford officially announced that a ‘no-compromise RS model’ would go on sale in 2009. And if you can’t wait that long then Ford has released this teaser picture of what the car could look like.

Volkswagen GTI Roadster for Gran Turismo uncovered – gets 496 bhp

Thu, 29 May 2014

The Volkswagen GTI Roadster (pictured) is uncovered We revealed last week that VW were making their GTI Roadster from the Gran Turismo game in to a real car for the Worthersee show, and they have. Blurring the lines between the real and the virtual (which is the way all our lives are going) Volkswagen has taken the opportunity to build a real life GTI Roadster – without the constraints of a concept heading for production – and has come up with a tw-seater open roadster that has some design cues from the Golf but is shorter and a lot lower. Those deign cues extend to a a front end that looks like a squashed GTI with its headlights and grill on show with big air intakes, all of which conspires to make the GTI Roadster look even lower, emaner and wider than it is.

Drivers 'not always watching road'

Fri, 03 Jan 2014

MOTORISTS typically have their eyes off the road for a tenth of the time they are driving, a study has shown. For 10% of their journey they are eating, reaching for the phone, texting or engaged in other activities that cause concentration to wander away from what is happening beyond the windscreen. Predictably, teenagers who had recently passed their test were most likely to crash or experience a near-miss as a result of being distracted, according to US researchers.