Returns MUST be requested within 14 days after client receives the item.
Returns accepted "ONLY" if they item(s) have NOT being installed and are in similar condition as when they were shipped with all packing and instructions.
If you missed parts of the item, item CANNOT be returned.
Return Policy EXCEPTIONS. We do not accept returns in:
(1) Open software.
(2) Custom or special order items.
(3) Paint and chemicals.
(4) Liquid like maintenance products.
(5) Some electrical and fuel components in which factories do not accept returns.
This piece of organic-looking, handcrafted aluminium is called the ‘Frankfurt Flyer’ – a bespoke creation by American engineer Chris Runge. It’s rather special too, as the original Flyer racing car is the forebear to one of the most famous Porsche models ever, the 550 Spyder. This is one man’s painstaking recreation of one of the finest post-war sports cars to ever see the light of day, and it could be yours for $60,000 – around £36,500.
Saab Meltdown gets closer
It never rains, but it pours. And for Saab and Victor Muller it has been a year or more of almost unbroken storms, punctuated with just the odd ray of financial sunshine as Victor Muller combs the planet for investors to stake a claim in his chocolate teapot company. There has been no production at Saab of any consequence since April; many suppliers still remain unpaid despite substantial injections of cash from Chinese buyers; wages have not been paid and now, just to rub salt in the wound, it’s been revealed that board members received pay rises of up to 650 per cent in 2010.
From 1960s Chevelles to modern Camaros, speedy Chevrolets have always been identified with two letters: SS. But does the tradition-laden performance designation have a future in the new General Motors, which is under pressure to cut costs, make money and meet stricter fuel-economy regulations? “Absolutely,” Mark Reuss, GM vice president of global engineering, told AutoWeek.