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Light Bulb - Offset - Double Contact - 50-15 Candlepower - 12 Volt Halogen - Use on 2040-parts.com

US $9.95
Location:

Lockport, New York, United States

Lockport, New York, United States
Condition:New Brand:Eckler's Automotive Model Year Range:1933 - 1948 Manufacturer Part Number:47-62547-1 Part Type:Light Bulbs

Iowa distributes thumb bands imprinted with ‘TXTING KILLS'

Tue, 19 Oct 2010

Thumb bands that read “TXTNG KILLS” have been making their way around the state of Iowa, the Wall Street Journal reports. The bands--which are meant to serve as a reminder to avoid texting while driving--have been distributed at events such as the Iowa State Fair and the Iowa-Iowa State college football game. “A lot of people want them for their kids,” Courtney Greene, spokeswoman for Iowa's Department of Public Safety, told the Wall Street Journal.

BAC Mono: Fancy a Drive?

Fri, 08 Apr 2011

RS Academy grabs the first two BAC Monos Last month we reported on a new single-seat road car that offers more thrills than a garage full of hypercars for less than the cost of an M5 – the BAC Mono. The brothers Briggs - Briggs Automotive Company – have created the beautifully built, finished and specified Mono as the world’s only single-seat production car (well, the only one that’s actually made it in to production, anyway). Weighing no more than Kylie after a heavy diet, the Mono can scoot to 60mph in just 2.8 seconds before running out of steam somewhere around 170mph.

'Snake & Mongoose' movie review

Fri, 06 Sep 2013

There's another great motorsports rivalry being celebrated cinematically this month -- while "Rush" grabs all the global headlines, the drag racing biopic "Snake & Mongoose" has all the same elements that drove Lauda and Hunt -- minus the world stage. Hard to believe, but professional drag racing wasn't always a glamorous, high-budget affair with corporate hospitality suites and top drivers flying to races in private jets. "Snake & Mongoose" takes us back to an era when drivers needed that $500 win money to buy gas to get to the next race -- and held grudges against track owners who only paid $400.