Competition Car
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KMC Wheels Bring Style Like No One Else
In today's hyper-competitive custom wheel market, a real player these days seems to be the KMC Wheel Company. When you think of a car or automobile, one of the first things that come to mind are the wheels, usually. Well, KMC Wheels deliver on many fronts. Face it; wheels or rims are vital to the automobile, and a nice-looking set of them can make even the most plain-Jane car look like a customized street machine.
Move Up in Size. KMC Wheels and KMC Rims come in sizes from 16 inches up to some really large ones of 26 inches or more. These are the wheels that KMC Wheel Company knows are going to end up on more than a few urban street machines. The smaller-diameter wheels are purpose-built for street performance and handling.
Wheels and Rims? What's the difference between a car's wheels or rims? Not much, really. Sometimes, there's a subtle joining up of the spokes in a wheel to its lip or flange, but that's pretty much all there is to it. But the word "rims" can convey a sense of street smartness, especially in wheels of 20 inches or more in diameter. In the end, though, they're all actually wheels.
Rolling Metals. Steel was the metal of choice for a car's Custom Wheels for much of the automobile's history. It had the advantage of durability and it could actually be bent back into shape somewhat, if it was dented. But it was heavier, and that could hurt a car's ability to move quickly.
Stepping Up to Alloys. Any wheel worth its performance or appearance salt will be made of one sort of alloy or another, these days. Alloy wheels are lighter, and reduce rolling resistance, which helps a car's speed. Also, they help reduce fuel consumption because the car has less weight to pull. But if you break one, you can usually forget about having it repaired. There are even titanium or magnesium automobile wheels these days, though they're more expensive than aluminum.
How's it Affixed. A wheel is attached to a car's axle through its hubs, one for each of the four wheels. With the exception of some Formula One and other racers, they're all attached using four or five bolts in most cases. Some wheels, depending on what we want them to do, can have several more, but a good-looking wheel usually has four to five. KMC Wheel Company offers numerous examples of four or five-bolt wheels and even some with a few more than that.
We All Have to do Something. KMC products are manufactured specifically to take your pedestrian-looking car and turn it into something beautiful. Many of them are also performance-oriented. This also helps to make them speedier. Urban wheel sets are the rage, and they can take your car to a whole new level.
Roll On. Whether you want a hot-looking street machine that goes fast, or a hot-looking street machine that isn't meant for a bit of street racing, KMC Rims deliver the goods. They come in all sorts of sizes, colors and finishes, too. And all of them will definitely help your car make a statement. For more information, check out our site http://www.hubcap-tire-wheel.com/.
what will be louder????????
2 of these
http://www.thedeepdiscount.com/p-63-ma-audio-hk120xc-pair-1200-watt-12-dvc-competition-car-subwoofers-dual-voice-coil-4-ohm-1200w-subs.aspx
or 8 of these
http://www.thedeepdiscount.com/p-504-acoustic-audio-bass12-2-pair-800w-12-car-subwoofers-component-subs.aspx
They are both pretty low quality. And the "8" ones are about the worst subs you can buy, but theres 8 of them...
The 8 will be louder. Thats just too much cone area! Do you have room for all 8 of them? That would be a mighty big box. And, remember, they are 25 dollar subs, so dont expect them to handle a lot of power, at all.
In the World: Fostering entrepreneurship in developing nations (MIT)
In 2000, three African undergraduates at MIT, inspired by their experience
with MIT’s LeaderShape leadership training program, founded an organization
whose goal was to give students in the developing world the programming skills
to create locally relevant e-commerce applications. After graduating that
spring, two of the students — Paul Njoroge and Martin Mbaya — returned to
their native Kenya, along with a fellow alumnus and a graduate student in
linguistics, to conduct a six-week course on Java and Linux for 45
undergraduates at Nairobi’s Strathmore University.
In the 11 years since, the organization, Accelerating Information Technology
Innovation (AITI), has sent more than 120 MIT students to seven countries —
six in Africa, plus Sri Lanka — to train more than 1,500 undergraduates. AITI
courses have also spawned a host of mobile-Web startups, including HeHe, which
created a car-sharing application and has contracts with both the Rwandan
government and with MTN, a telecommunications company with operations in 21
African nations; iChecki, which markets an app for tracking taxi cabs and, in
2010, won not only the entrepreneurship competition that concluded the AITI
course in Nairobi but also the peer-recognition award at the MobileMonday
conference in Helsinki, Finland; and ...
(HD) The BTF KOH Race Car grenades an Atlas on Cable Hill at Gray Rock
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US $1,499.95


































































































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