(2) 3/16 Inch (5mm)amsteel Blue Dyneema Soft Shackles on 2040-parts.com
MA, United States
Sailing Hardware & Gear for Sale
- Sunfish sailboat rudder with brass hardware(US $475.00)
- Seven 'd' & one bow sailboat rigging shackles, 7 stainless steel & 1 galvanized(US $35.00)
- Pair of stainless steel sailboat wire rigging clamps for up to 5/16" wire rope(US $14.99)
- Vintage set of two large english lewmar or4 tuphnol fixed bail sailboat blocks(US $80.00)
- Assortment of small sailboat rigging strap eyes and pad eyes(US $14.99)
- Eckles design sailing trapeze harness, captains harness / prindle/ hobie cat(US $129.95)
Lotus 'Eagle' (2009): first pictures
Tue, 15 Jul 2008By Ben Pulman First Official Pictures 15 July 2008 19:00 This is the long-awaited new Lotus 2+2, with a 3.5-litre Toyota V6 and four apparently useable seats. It's the first new Lotus for 13 years and a pretty significant launch, due for its show debut at the 2008 London motor show later this month on 22 July 2008. That's when we’ll find out the name of this new Lotus – codenamed Eagle – but in the meantime the company is teasing us with some new details.
Mercedes SLS AMG: F1 Safety Car 2010
Sat, 27 Feb 2010The Mercedes SLS AMG will be the F1 safety car in 2010 The new F1 season is close to kicking off, and we’ll get round to doing a preview of what’s happening at the start of the 2010 season once we’ve got Geneva out of the way (at least the first bit of Geneva - the F1 season starts on 14th March in Bahrain so we’ll need to get round to it before then). But one bit of news that isn’t team or driver related is the announcement that the safety car for 2010 will be the Mercedes SLS AMG, replacing the car that’s done the job for the last two years – the Mercedes SL63 AMG. Surprisingly, the SLS AMG is the most powerful car ever to be used as a safety car in F1.
Parents ignoring school run safety rules
Fri, 16 May 2014MORE THAN a third of parents who drive their children to school think it is acceptable to stop or park on school safety zigzag lines, with a quarter admitting to doing so, according to research from AXA Car Insurance. Furthermore, 88% of school-run parents have witnessed fellow motorists stopping in the restricted zigzag area at least once a week. Zigzag lines prohibit waiting, parking or stopping for any reason during school run times, and yet only 17% of adults in the survey knew that.