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3.5 Hp 2 Stroke Outboard Motor Fishing Boat Engine Water Cooling System Newest on 2040-parts.com

US $227.70
Location:

Chino, California, United States

Chino, California, United States
Condition:New: A brand-new, unused, unopened, undamaged item in its original packaging (where packaging is applicable). Packaging should be the same as what is found in a retail store, unless the item was packaged by the manufacturer in non-retail packaging, such as an unprinted box or plastic bag. See the seller's listing for full details. See all condition definitions Type:2-stroke Brand:Hangkai Manufacturer Part Number:OUTBOARDENGINE54876US Bundle Listing:Yes Full throttle perating range:4000~5000rpm Maximum output:3.5HP Speed:20km/h(four people) Ignition system:CDI system Propeller mark:7-1/45-A(inch) Fuel Type:Mixed Oil Gear ratio:27/13 Engine(HP):3.5HP Stroke:2-Stroke Country/Region of Manufacture:China UPC:Does not apply

Kia Cee’d ISG on the way

Thu, 15 Jan 2009

As with most of these Stop/Go systems, a good fuel saving can be made, particularly in town driving and, importantly for companies striving to meet emissions targets, a reduction in running time means an overall reduction in emissions. In town driving the savings on the Cee’d are around 15%, but drop to 6% overall. Still, it all helps.

Probe of the Ford F-150 is expanded to cover 2.7 million vehicles

Mon, 09 May 2011

U.S. safety regulators have expanded to 2.7 million vehicles an investigation into faulty fuel-tank straps on Ford F-150 pickups. Officials are looking into whether the straps that hold the fuel tanks can rust and break on F-150s from the 1997-2001 model years.

Call for ban on on vehicle-side advertising

Thu, 08 May 2014

ALL ADVERTISING and promotional banners on commercial vehicles should be banned as they are distracting to other drivers and tempt them to use mobile phones while driving. This is the call from Flexed, a car leasing company, which has carried out a survey that shows a quarter (23%) of drivers admit to trying to type a website address into smartphone after seeing an advert on a lorry. A further 10% of drivers admitted they had tried to take a camera phone photo of an advertisement on a commercial vehicle to use later.