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Common Car Burglar Alarm Protection Keyless Entry System Remote Control For Benz on 2040-parts.com

US $18.77
Location:

Shenzhen, China

Shenzhen, China
Condition:New Brand:Unbranded MPN:Does not apply Manufacturer Part Number:Does Not Apply Marque:Does Not Apply UPC:Does Not Apply Numéro de pièce fabricant:Non applicable EAN:Does Not Apply Manufacturer:Does not apply ISBN:Does Not Apply

Local authorities cashing in with CCTV fines

Tue, 15 Apr 2014

Councils are turning to CCTV cameras and spy cars to raise £312m in revenue, that’s according to Traffic Spies, a report published by civil liberties group, Big Brother Watch. Using a series of freedom of information requests, the group has discovered that many councils are continuing to use CCTV to hand out fines, despite the government’s Surveillance Camera Code of Practice, which highlights the need to use CCTV for traffic offences “sparingly”. Council parking ’spy car’ gets speeding ticket Cameras to catch illegal parking on the school run Yet despite this, the number of CCTV cars in operation has increased by 87% since 2009.

Vettel takes pole in Brazilian Grand Prix at rain-soaked Interlagos

Sat, 23 Nov 2013

Vettel takes pole in Brazilian Grand Prix at rain-soaked Interlagos The weather may have been horrible – with rain lashing the Interlagos track – and Sebastian Vettel may already have taken the F1 driver’s title for 2013, but the weather and the already won title made no difference. Sebastian Vettel has taken pole position for Red Bull at the Brazilian Grand Prix. The heavy rain at Interlagos managed to delay Q3, but Vettel was as impressive as he has been for the rest of the season to continue the run of Red Bull poles, followed by Nico Rosberg in the Mercedes in second and Fernando Alonso took third place, his equal best starting place this season.

Incredible 'see-through bonnet' technology revealed

Wed, 09 Apr 2014

LAND ROVER has unveiled a barely believable new technology that allows off-road drivers to effectively see through the bonnet all the way to the ground. Cameras mounted on the front grille film the terrain and transmit the visual feed to a head-up display for the driver. The alignment is set up to perfectly match the real angle of view beyond the bonnet, creating seamless visibility right back to the car’s wheels.