Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Garmin Vhf Active Speaker, Black 010-11217-10 on 2040-parts.com

US $65.00
Location:

Port Saint Lucie, Florida, United States

Port Saint Lucie, Florida, United States
Condition:New Brand:Garmin

Description
Brand new not in box. Never used
This is for the speaker and cables only
No accessories only what is pictured
Connect your VHF radio to a compatible handset for on-board communication. The active speaker has a knob to adjust volume up or down as needed. Product Type: Speaker System Product Type: Speaker System Manufacturer Part Number: 010-11217-10 Color: Black Manufacturer: Garmin, Ltd Color: Black Manufacturer: Garmin, Ltd Product Name: Active Speaker Brand Name: Garmin Brand Name: Garmin Subwoofer Type: Active Subwoofer Type: Active

Kia K2 (2011) - it's the Rio saloon for China

Tue, 19 Apr 2011

Kia is developing a four-door saloon version of the new Rio supermini, dubbed K2 and revealed today at the 2011 Shanghai motor show. The Kia K2 has been developed specifically for the Chinese market and there are no plans - even in the long run - to bring it to the UK, according to a UK spokesman. Kia K2: looks like an Optima!

Toyota's global design chief Tokuo Fukuichi appointed president of Lexus

Thu, 27 Feb 2014

Toyota's global design chief Tokuo Fukuichi will be the first designer to sit on the company's board of directors when his appointment comes into effect on 1 April. Fukuichi will retain his position as global head of design for the Toyota, Lexus and Scion brands and will join the board after the general shareholders' meeting. His influence on Toyota's design direction over the last few years has been noticeable, particularly with Lexus, as the company strives to make its traditionally very conservative products a little more exciting.

Multi-touch UI reduces touchscreen interaction to simple swipes [w/video]

Fri, 21 Feb 2014

Touchscreens have become widespread standard features in many cars over the last few years, consolidating the modern car's many functions into one interface. But despite their advantages there's the big downside of driver distraction, something user interface designer Matthaeus Krenn believes he has solved with his UI. Unlike most other touchscreens, Krenn's interface isn't organized into menus and small, hard-to-hit buttons, but instead makes use of multi-touch gestures, reducing the accuracy and attention needed to operate key functions.