Tuning Phone Cases - iPhone and Android
Performance Tuning Society Engine Pistons Turbocharger Fun Phone Case
by Leading Choice
$17 $23
Description: 🏎️🇯🇵 Honda Civic GTi – Lightweight Legend with VTEC Bite The Honda Civic GTi captures everything that makes the Civic a tuner icon — compact, agile, and endlessly modifiable. Whether it’s a clean EF, a slammed EG, or a K-swapped build, this Civic is all about high-revving fun and street respect. Perfect for JDM fans, garage builders, and Honda heads who know that less weight + more revs = more fun. 🧰🔧🏁
Funny ECU Tuning Car Check Engine Light Liked Your Post Phone Case
by Carantined Chao$
$17 $23
Description: Datsun didn't make it's way to America until the late '50s, but by the time the 1973 oil crisis came around, they were well-positioned with their smaller, fuel-efficient line of vehicles. This design is based on the logo most Americans probably recall when thinking of Datsun as it's their most refined version which was in use from 1976 to 1986 before the nameplate was retired in favor of the Nissan brand.
Description: A tangled mass of rot and webs—this Devourment logo crawls with dripping filth and slamming menace. A filthy tribute to the Texas titans of brutal, down-tuned death metal devastation.
Devourment – Slam Death Metal Logo with Cobweb Drip Phone Case
by robouts store
$17 $23
Description: Perfect for JDM lovers and drift fans, this Nissan S15 RaceCar artwork captures the spirit of street racing and Japanese motorsports. Ideal for tuners, car enthusiasts, and Silvia fans.
Nissan S15 JDM Race Car - Drift Car Art - Motorsport Tuning Poster Phone Case
by SussIt Media
$17 $23
Description: "Dandy" Dick Landy was a master showman and a major pioneer in Super Stock, Funny Car, and Pro Stock drag racing. He was known for his innovative race cars, wild wheel stands, and his signature look of pressed white pants and jacket and long cigar clenched between his teeth. Automotive Research was Landy's first engine-building and tuning shop, opened in Sherman Oaks, California, in the early 1960s. Later, he would change the name to Dick Landy Industries and move to nearby Northridge. The business, which also employed his brother who acted as crew chief and engine builder, would continue until Landy's death in 2007.