Genuine Mercury Marine Mercruiser Oem 420,425,500,525,575, Engine Mount 844843t on 2040-parts.com
Pompano Beach, Florida, United States
Mounting & Brackets for Sale
- Mercruiser 485 gimbal housing assy. p/n 70861a1(US $420.00)
- Mercruiser 485 hydraulic trim cylinder p/n 87173a5(US $70.00)
- Mercruiser 485 hydraulic trim cylinder p/n 87173a5(US $70.00)
- Mercruiser 485 port hydraulic trim hose p/n 87234, 86036(US $25.00)
- Mercruiser 485 hydraulic connector to pump hose p/n 55816(US $25.00)
- Mercruiser new oem gimbal housing transom plate gasket 27-54395t, 54395, 543951(US $49.94)
Toyota says software glitch in data boxes can give faulty speed readings
Tue, 14 Sep 2010A top Toyota executive says the crash data boxes in its vehicles are reliable but a bug in the software that reads the information can provide inaccurate vehicle speeds. The disclosure comes as the National Highway Transportation Safety Administration continues its investigation into unintended acceleration of Toyota models. “Toyota has acknowledged previously that the event data recorders are not accurate,” said Takeshi Uchiyamada, executive vice president in charge of research and development.
Volvo testing new safety features
Tue, 10 Jul 2012Volvo outlined three new technologies that it says will help make the Volvos of the future a good deal safer: autonomous driving, “Intersection Support” and animal detection. Volvo says it's tailoring technologies to the way people drive, by which it means poorly. The company claims that “surveys from three different research institutes in the United States reveal that modern drivers spend 25 to 30 percent of their time behind the wheel doing other things, such as focusing on mobile communication.” Volvo's new technologies are said take this into account and “provide the driver with the right support at all times.” By using a camera and radar, future Volvos will be able to follow the car in front while driving in slow traffic using an autonomous-driving function.
Men 'twice as likely to fall asleep while driving'
Fri, 17 Jan 2014MEN ARE more than twice as likely to fall asleep at wheel while driving and almost half (45%) admit to having experienced 'warning nods' while driving. One in 14 drivers surveyed by safety charity Brake said they had actually fallen asleep when driving, while 45% of men said they had continued to drive despite their head nodding through tiredness. For women, the proportion that admitted driving while sleepy was 22%.