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View Full Version : RS 3 lip kit!


captainlaziness
10-12-2007, 01:03 AM
Racing Solution has come through once again. Want an RS3 tC in a color other than Blizzard Pearl? Here ya go:
http://www.racingsolution.com/showparts2.asp?Part_Num=1448&Function=DisplayPart

burstaneurysm
10-12-2007, 02:32 AM
So it's a Kenstyle knockoff?

captainlaziness
10-12-2007, 04:33 PM
Yup, with the exception of the side skirts. The RS3 Kenstyle kit doesn't have the skirts.

burstaneurysm
10-12-2007, 05:22 PM
I like the sides and rear... still not sure about the front.

captainlaziness
10-13-2007, 03:00 AM
What's wrong with the front? Too Civic-ish?

burstaneurysm
10-13-2007, 03:04 AM
I dunno.. I'm not feeling the vents I guess... it's too angular, kinda like the JP kit for the tC. I really dislike that thing.

captainlaziness
10-14-2007, 05:26 AM
The thing that bothers me (now that I've looked at it some more) is that Racing Solution forgot to make the RS3 upper grille.

I like the JP kit, but I think it may be impractical for a DD.

burstaneurysm
10-14-2007, 05:56 AM
There's a guy running the JP kit around here... it's really, really low.

Fredy
11-02-2007, 06:40 PM
don't like the rs3 lip kit. Front end looks a little weird to me.

aagreen
11-20-2009, 08:16 AM
American-made chocolate and cocoa products number in the hundreds. There is a fascinating story behind these wonderful products.
Chocolate through the years  
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The story of chocolate, as far back as we know it, begins with the discovery of America. Until 1492, the Old World knew nothing at all about the delicious and stimulating flavor that was to become the favorite of millions. The Court of King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella got its first look at the principal ingredient(原料) of chocolate when Columbus returned in triumph (胜利) from America and laid before the Spanish throne a treasure of many strange and wonderful things. Among these were a few dark brown beans. They were cocoa beans, today’s source of all our chocolate and cocoa. replica rolex (http://www.replicawatchesGuide.com)
The King and Queen never dreamed how important cocoa beans could be, the great Spanish explorer, to grasp the commercial possibilities of the New World offerings. 
Food of the gods(极受崇敬的人)
During his conquest of Mexico, Cortez found the Aztec Indians using cocoa beans in the preparation of the royal drink, “chocolate,” meaning warm liquid. In 1519, Emperor Montezuma served chocolate to his Spanish guests, treating it like a food for the gods. 
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For all its royal importance, however, Montezuma’s chocolate was very bitter, and the Spaniards did not find it to their taste. To make it more agreeable to Europeans, Cortez and his countrymen conceived the idea of sweetening it with cane sugar(蔗糖). 
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The new drink quickly won friends. Spain wisely proceeded to plant cacao in its overseas colonies. Remarkably enough, the Spanish succeeded in keeping the art of the cocoa industry a secret from the rest of Europe for nearly a hundred years. 
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Chocolate spreads to Europe 
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Spanish monks, who had been sent to process the cocoa beans, finally let the secret out. It did not take long before chocolate was popular throughout Europe as a delicious, health-giving food. Chocolate drinking spread across the Channel to Great Britain, and in 1657 the first of many famous English Chocolate Houses appeared. 
The 19th century marked two more revolutionary developments in the history of chocolate. In 1847, an English company introduced solid “eating chocolate” through the development of soft chocolate, which formerly controlled the world market. The second development occurred in 1876 in Switzerland, when Daniel Peter thought out a way of adding milk to the chocolate, creating the product we enjoy today known as milk chocolate. 
Chocolate comes to America
In the United States of America, the production of chocolate proceeded at a faster pace than anywhere else in the world. It was in 1765, to be exact, that the first chocolate factory was established in this country.