Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Bug4 Biplane Glider Plans- 66 Color Sheets 11x17 - Homebuilt Ultralight Airchair on 2040-parts.com

US $27.77
Location:

Des Moines, Iowa, US

Des Moines, Iowa, US
:


  Mike Sandlin's Series of Basic Ultralight Gliders, or BUGs as they are called are perhaps the most exciting projects on the homebuilding scene in a long time. Mike builds his prototypes in his garage using basic hand tools.
  

        Here's a vid    >

 All of Mike Sandlin's drawing are the most thorough that I have ever seen. Loaded with instructions, tips and guidelines on building. Color coding is used throughout for clarity.

This plan set is 66 pages of Color prints on 11 x 17 paper. They sure are pretty. They will be shipped flat and unfolded. 

 Free Shipping

Thanks for looking. I have other plans listed.....take a look.

Porsche 911 Turbo (2010) unveiled

Fri, 07 Aug 2009

By Ben Pulman First Official Pictures 07 August 2009 10:14 This is Porsche’s new 911 Turbo, with an enlarged and twin-turbocharged engine producing more power, plus the option of a twin-clutch gearbox that features proper gearshift paddles. Unbelievably, it’s the first entirely new engine in the 35-year history of the Turbo. Essentially it’s the same direct-injection 3.8-litre flat-six that you’ll find in regular 911s, but now fitted with variable geometry twin turbos to give a healthy 493bhp, a 20bhp increase over the current car.

Video: Adrian van Hooydonk on the BMW 4-Series Coupe concept

Mon, 10 Dec 2012

BMW's Director of Design Adrian van Hooydonk explains the design strategy behind the 4-Series Coupe concept's design in a video interview filmed at the car's reveal at the Munich Design Night. He talks us through how the design team played with the wheelbase length to create new shapes and convey a sense of "elegance and power". Check out the full story and gallery of the BMW 4-Series Coupe concept for more information on the car that will replace the 3 Series coupe.

Major restrictions suggested for learner drivers

Fri, 11 Oct 2013

A NEW report on potential changes to young driver training could cut accident casualties by more than 4,000 a year. The report, from transport research group TRL, recommends teenagers should not be allowed to take their driving test until they are 18, rather than the current threshold of 17. They would have to have a 12-month "learner stage" beginning at 17 with a requirement for at least 100 hours of day-time and 20 hours of night-time supervised practice.