Radar & Autopilots for Sale
New furuno fap-6112 rudder reference feedback for navpilot series autopilots(US $349.95)
Navico wheel pilot wp4000(US $169.40)
6sa003088 garmin radar voltage converter, k00-01414-00(US $219.98)
Furuno marine radar dome rsb-0060 w/ head unit 1621 (rdp-105)(US $350.00)
Brand new furuno fmd-3200/3300 keyboard(US $1,275.00)
Raytheon raymarine r 20x raster scan radar mariners pathfinder **untested unit**(US $159.99)
MG Zero Concept at Beijing
Sat, 24 Apr 2010The MG Zero Concept has been revealed at the Beijing Motor Show It’s good to see a new MG. True, it may not be everyone’s idea of where MG should be, but at least Morris Garages lives to die another day and stays alive as a marque, which is more than you can say for Riley or Hillman or Humber or Triumph or Rover or Austin or Morris or Alvis or… What this may be is the MG2 we snapped being loaded on to a trailer in China a few weeks ago, but there is so little detail from MG in the press release on the MG Zero concept they might just as well not have bothered. If we’re going to get treated to a new MG – concept or not – it would sort of help if we got some detail.
Lexus LF-Ch hybrid (2009): first photo
Tue, 01 Sep 2009Lexus LF-Ch: the first photo of the new hybrid compact hatchback from Lexus By Tim Pollard First Official Pictures 01 September 2009 13:31 Lexus has just issued this first photograph of its new LF-Ch concept car – a hybrid petrol-electric hatchback that is expected on sale by summer 2010. It's the car we previewed a few days ago, known only as the Lexus Premium Compact Concept. Now we know it's called the LF-Ch.What does that Lexus LF-Ch badge mean?
London rush hour 'worst in UK'
Thu, 05 Jun 2014ANALYSIS of in-car telematics data has revealed that London commuters get the worst deal in rush hour, with average speeds 30% slower than those across other British cities. The study of 20 million miles of telematics data by Direct Line Drive Plus shows that despite London having more congestion-fighting measures than anywhere else in the country, its road-based commuters suffer worse peak time traffic misery than anywhere else. During peak times, cars in Westminster travel at an average speed of just 10.06mph, compared to a figure of 14.38mph across the biggest British cities.