Stainless Steel Boat Hand Rail Fitting 90 Degree Tee For 1" Tubing on 2040-parts.com
Canada and Usa, United States
Deck & Cabin Hardware for Sale
- Stainless steel boat hand rail fitting 90 degree tee for 7/8" tubing(C $12.99)
- Stainless steel boat hand rail fitting universal tee 60 degree tee 1"(C $19.99)
- Stainless boat hand rail end fitting 5 1/2 degree for 7/8 tubing end out(C $14.99)
- Stainless boat hand rail end fitting 5 1/2 degree for 7/8 tubing end in(C $19.99)
- Boat door cabinet hatch turn button catch latch-large- marine stainless steel(US $13.75)
- Seachoice stainless steel gas deck fill plate for 1 1/2" id hose part# 32251(US $35.99)
Mercedes GLK at Detroit
Tue, 15 Jan 2008By Guy Bird First Official Pictures 15 January 2008 21:28 When the pictures of Mercedes’ new small SUV concept were shown prior to Christmas, there were plenty of pained expressions in the CAR office. To be honest, the cars look little better in the metal. Aiming to draw inspiration from the iconic boxiness of the legendary G-Wagon and the more car-inspired sculptural curves of the huge GL-class, the resulting melange does no credit to either.
BMW Z4M? Sorry, it’s the Z4 M-Sport
Sat, 19 Sep 2009BMW are testing a Z4 with an M-Sport package round the Nurburgring I suppose that at least this way you can have a Z4 that looks the part- with bigger wheels and bumpers and maybe even a suspension tweak or three – without having to bother with the big price ticket or the not inconsiderable running costs. To be fair, the Z4 sDrive35i is not particularly slow. It will manage to get to 60 mph in around 5.0 seconds; handles well and looks so much better than the Z3 did.
A Fiat Accompli: Rodeo Drive, Italian style
Sun, 19 Jun 2011The annual Father's Day car celebration, the Rodeo Drive Concours, has feted many a marque over the years, from the inaugural show in 1993 honoring the Ferrari 348 Spyder to one year that celebrated the first 100 years of the automobile by bringing one representative car from each of those 100 years. But this year, it was Fiat. Yes, Fiat, the humble little car that put Italy back on wheels after the war.