1974 Cessna 340 Owner's Manual, Sn 301 And Up. on 2040-parts.com
Fort Worth, Texas, United States
NAV/COMs for Sale
- Icom ic-a200 avionics vhf com transceiver with rack and power connector(US $700.00)
- King kx 170b nav/comm used(US $350.00)
- Bendix king kx99 aviation radio(US $100.00)
- Western electric percent distortion & bias meter aa2l aa3e(US $39.97)
- Garmin gps 400, gnc 420 & gns 430 traffic/weather pilot's guide addendum(US $14.95)
- Bendix/king kx 165 p/n 069-1025-21 14 vdc with glide/slope with faa form 8130-3(US $2,795.00)
Classic Car Boot Sale returns to London
Mon, 24 Feb 2014Fans of vintage cars, fashion and memorabilia will have all their wishes met at next month’s Classic Car Boot Sale, returning to London’s Southbank Centre. Following the inaugural event last year that attracted over 8,000 visitors this year’s event has been extended over Saturday 15th and Sunday 16th March. Located along the riverfront at Southbank Centre between the Queen’s Walk, Hungerford Bridge and Jubilee Gardens, the Classic Car Boot Sale will have an interesting mix of fashions, homeware and memorabilia, all sold from the boots of classic cars.
Win the first new Jaguar XJ
Mon, 19 Oct 2009Jaguar are hoping to raise £1 million for the NSPCC in a ‘Win a new XJ’ competition But the work of actually getting the XJ in to customers’ hands in now the focus, and although we did an update on the new XJ’s progress recently there is nothing much more to report until cars hit the road in January. But if you want to have the privilege of owning the very first new XJ off the production line – a 3.0 litre diesel Portfolio worth £62k – you can enter a competition Jaguar are running to give away that very first car. Jaguar are hoping that sales of tickets for the competition – which cost £125 each – will raise £1 million for the NSPCC’s ‘Child’s Voice’ appeal, which is aiming to raise £50 million in total to fund its helplines.
Toyota says software glitch in data boxes can give faulty speed readings
Tue, 14 Sep 2010A top Toyota executive says the crash data boxes in its vehicles are reliable but a bug in the software that reads the information can provide inaccurate vehicle speeds. The disclosure comes as the National Highway Transportation Safety Administration continues its investigation into unintended acceleration of Toyota models. “Toyota has acknowledged previously that the event data recorders are not accurate,” said Takeshi Uchiyamada, executive vice president in charge of research and development.