New Octopus Rudder Feed Back Potentiometer Module Garmin, Furuno, on 2040-parts.com
Bayville, New Jersey, United States
Radar & Autopilots for Sale
- New octopus rudder feed back potentiometer module autohelm raymarine kit(US $221.21)
- Raymarine raytheon raypilot 650 rp650 autopilot control head(US $325.00)
- Raytheon/raymarine 4kw analog dome open array pigtail connector m92654 rd424(US $34.99)
- Furuno navnet vx1 10" 1833c 4kw 24" dome radar system complete w/cables(US $1,399.99)
- Furuno radar radome antenna rotating array model 1730/1731/1830/1831/ etc.(US $79.99)
- Furuno radar display front panel with front panel pc board and keypad/trackpad(US $49.99)
Audi A4 (2007): first official pictures
Wed, 29 Aug 2007By Ben Pulman First Official Pictures 29 August 2007 09:30 This can't be the new A4! It look just like an A5... That it does, but should you really complain?
Maybach Coupe for sale: First Maybach Cruiserio Coupe up for grabs
Sun, 26 Dec 2010Maybach Cruiserio Coupe - up For Sale We’ve run a couple of stories about a coupe version of the Maybach 57S this year, starting with the rather surprising news that a Maybach Coupe was coming - especially as it wasn’t going to be the spectacular Exelero Coupe – and culminating in the confirmation that German company Xenatec were building 100 Maybach Coupes. What I don’t think we knew at the time was that the whole Maybach Coupe plan was being funded by Saudi-based Auto Kingdom, which probably explains quite a lot. The Maybach has not been an explosive success since it launched – it’s been completely eclipsed by the far superior Rolls Royce Phantom – but its best market has probably been the Middle East, so Auto kingdom are probably pretty scure in the knowledge they can shift one or two of the Maybach Coupes on their home turf.
Alarming number of drivers lack road sign knowledge
Thu, 08 May 2014A THIRD OF DRIVERS in the UK do not know even the most basic road signs such as the National Speed Limit and Slippery Road warnings. This is the finding of a survey by More Than, which found that 34% of drivers in the UK did not know what the National Speed Limit sign was. The Slippery Road sign was misunderstood by one in seven drivers as meaning ‘paint on the road.’ With research conducted alongside 29 police forces, the survey found 20% of UK drivers had received penalty points for speeding in the past 10 years.