Seating for Sale
- Seafit folding deck chair (1" anodized aluminum) white vinyl marine lc(US $190.00)
- Ranger vinyl yellow / black / gray bucket seat 21 1/2" x 22" marine boat
- (2) two wise embroidered high back boat seat
- Ranger vinyl gray / yellow / black folding fishing seat 25" x 18 1/2" marine boa
- Ranger gray / off white vinyl leaning post back 35 1/2" x 10 1/2" marine boat
- Ranger black / gray / yellow vinyl folding fishing seat marine boat
Dodge Charger SRT Hellcat (2015): the world’s fastest saloon
Thu, 14 Aug 2014By Tim Pollard First Official Pictures 14 August 2014 17:10 Following hot on the heels of the Dodge Challenger SRT Hellcat comes the four-door version - the new Charger SRT Hellcat, unveiled this week and due to be built from early 2015. The company claims it’s the ‘quickest, fastest and most powerful sedan in the world,’ and a quick look at the specs suggests they’ve created a super-saloon to shame the fastest four-doors from Europe. The new four-door Hellcat packs a 707bhp punch and is capable of a standing quarter mile in just 11.0sec.
Lotus Exige S Roadster Official: Price (£52,800) and Specs
Wed, 22 May 2013It’s the first properly good news from Lotus for a while, and looks a promising offering at the same price (£52,800) as the tin top Exige S and, remarkably for a convertible, actually weighing less than the hard top – although by only 10kg. The Exige S Roadster gets the same 3.5 litre V6 as the coupe which means 345bhp, 295lb/ft of torque and a 0-60mph of a very respectable 3.8 seconds, but it does lose the coupe’s rear wing and front splitter for better airflow. The folding roof on the Roadster is a manual affair, but Lotus say fresh air motoring is just ‘Two clicks and a roll away’, so the manual roof is probably the best – and lightest – option.
One-fourth of U.S. drivers have trouble paying for auto repairs, AAA says
Thu, 04 Aug 2011Americans have difficulty paying for costly vehicle repairs and are driving older cars longer, according to a survey released by AAA. One quarter of American drivers said they would be unable to pay for repairs to their vehicle of more than $2,000, and one in eight said they would be unable to pay for repairs of more than $1,000, the survey said. More than half of drivers said they are still driving an older vehicle “because they do not want the financial burden of a new one,” the survey said.