Body Shop Supplies for Sale
- Sem adhesion promoter aerosol 39863(US $24.94)
- 3m automotive acrylic plus attachment tape 1/4 inch(US $9.95)
- Neatsfoot pinstriping pinstripe brush preserving oil(US $10.99)
- 4oz. auto air iridescent candy apple red(US $16.94)
- Eastwood low voc urethane paint activator - slow(US $42.94)
- 4oz. auto air iridescent brite yellow(US $13.94)
Chevy Volt will do 230mpg
Tue, 11 Aug 2009GM are claiming 230 mpg for the Chevy Volt The premise is that the vast majority of buyers for the Chevy Volt will do no more than 40 miles a day. Which just happens to be the range that the Volt has. So I suppose they could have worked out the cost of the electricity to fully charge the Volt, converted that in to the cost of petrol and come to the conclusion that it does 230mpg.
Volvo Aims High With Its Self-Driving Car Tech Project
Mon, 02 Dec 2013SWEDISH car maker Volvo has announced it will embark on a large scale trial to refine the technology behind its self-driving cars. Volvo is no stranger to the technology having already conducted controlled experiments using ‘road trains’ – cars following each other closely at speed – but this exercise will involve 100 cars being deployed in the busy streets of Gothenburg, Sweden. The project ‘Drive Me – Self-driving cars for sustainable mobility’ is a joint initiative between Volvo Car Group, the Swedish Transport Administration, the Swedish Transport Agency, Lindholmen Science Park and the City of Gothenburg.
Top Gear answers critics of Electric Car Test. Again.
Wed, 03 Aug 2011Nissan LEAF runs out of electrickery in Lincoln on the Top Gear Test Top Gear and Electric Cars do have a habit of not getting on. And they didn’t get on in the latest Top Gear test when Jeremy (in a Nissan LEAF) and James (in a Peugeot iOn) set out to demonstrate the shortcomings of EVs, the same shortcomings we we bang on about constantly. The piece by Andy Wilman on Top Gear’s site is in response to an article in the Times, where Nissan complain that ‘…‘Clarkson didn’t give our electric cars a sporting chance.’ But he did, with the Top Gear piece designed to do nothing more than debunk the claims companies like Nissan make for their electric cars.