4pk Replacement For Southco Grabber Catches With Mounting Screws on 2040-parts.com
Elkhart, Indiana, United States
4 Replacement Grabber Catches with mounting screws Black Friction Catch, Plastic, These are very popular in all makes of RVs and Motorhomes. It also makes a great addition for new cabinets or restorations. 10 Pound Holding strength. Four 10lb. Grabber catches Per Pack with mounting screws. Thank you for Shopping! |
Interior for Sale
- Almond shelf bracket 24" plastic adjustable(US $4.99)
- Drawer slide ball bearing 100# 28 in, full ext with 1" over travel, zinc(US $22.23)
- Towel ring, alexandria collection #15707, satin nickel(US $13.99)
- 24" adjustable shelf bracket, plastic(US $4.99)
- Lockset, knob, c2 passage, matte black(US $13.95)
- Drawer slide ball bearing 3500 75# 10 inch, full extension, zinc(US $13.40)
Mercedes previews technology before Frankfurt auto show
Mon, 09 Sep 2013Future Mercedes will crash less often and use less gas doing so. We got a few insights into exactly how that will happen when we attended the Mercedes preview the night before the Frankfurt auto show. Inside its own enormous hall at the International Auto Austellung, Mercedes previewed gas-saving and accident-avoiding technologies we can expect to see on production cars within the next decade.
Apple's Siri to invade cars within one year
Mon, 11 Jun 2012The Apple Worldwide Developers Conference 2012 was under way on Monday at the Moscone Center in San Francisco, where Apple CEO Tim Cook has announced that the Siri personal assistant will soon be in the car. According to Cook, within the next 12 months, drivers will be able to hit a button on the steering wheel and connect with that disembodied voice from the commercials. BMW, General Motors, Mercedes-Benz, Jaguar, Audi, Toyota, Chrysler and Honda have all signed on for the experience.
The world’s roads cover an area the size of India
Thu, 26 Apr 2012The world's roads cover an area the size of India Canadian scientist Felix Pharand has mapped the world’s roads, flights and railways showing the man-made changes on earth – The Anthropocene. If you look at a photo of earth from space it’s easy to think that what you see is how it’s always been. But the planet has changed more in the last 100 years – thanks to man – than ever before.