Trolling Motor Components for Sale
- Minn kota copilot parts(US $89.99)
- The happy troller trolling plate size large 12”x14”(US $59.99)
- Minn kota transom trolling motor lock fits endura maxxum vantage vector e-drive(US $29.99)
- Marinco 70 amp trolling motor plug 12vbps3 oem(US $21.11)
- New minn kota 1866120 copilot remote control for powerdrive v2 riptide sp(US $40.00)
- Minn kota i-pilot replacement remote(US $39.99)
30% of drivers would do a runner after a parking scrape
Fri, 01 Aug 2014Almost a third of drivers would consider leaving the scene of an accident if only minor damage was caused – while another 4% said they’d do a runner even after a more serious collision. The shocking stats come from a survey of over 2,000 people commissioned by ContractHireAndLeasing.com. The world’s weirdest car crashes revealed Cheapest cars to insure for 17-18 year olds The results show that honesty amongst drivers varies depending on their age and location.
Koenigsegg planning an entry-level car – but it’ll still cost £500k
Sat, 26 Apr 2014Koenigsegg are planning an entry-level car at half the price of the Agera R (pictured) Think of the cars that Christian von Koenigsegg has made since he started with the CC8S in 2002 and you think of them as extremes of the supercar genre; the Swedish engineering take on the bloated and massively complex Bugatti Veyron. Christian’s men in a shed in Sweden have gone on to make a series of progressively quicker and more impressive supercars, through the CCR, CCX and the Agera and on to the current most extreme iteration – the Koenigsegg One:1. But it looks like Christian has decided that his ambition to create the world’s greatest hypercar leaves room for a ‘Lesser’ Koenigsegg, a car that still has innovative engineering and extreme performance but comes at a lower price.
What's different about electric cars this time? A column by Kevin A. Wilson
Thu, 05 Mar 2009Thirteen years after the General Motors EV1 was rolled out to cheers from advocates of a revolution in the way we power automobiles, those same advocates are out front cheerleading yet another revival of an idea as old as the automobile itself: Run 'em on batteries. Batteries aren't a source of energy. They're just storage units, a convenient means of making power portable.