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New Vortex 4 Bow Pontoon/deck Boat Bimini Top 10' Grey 97-103" on 2040-parts.com

US $269.00
Location:

Florence, Alabama, US

Florence, Alabama, US
Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Refund will be given as:Money back or exchange (buyer's choice) Item must be returned within:14 Days Return policy details:Please contact us if you feel the need to return something. We will be glad to help. Any returned item must be accompanied by a RMA number that is issued by VortexDirect. We must issue you a RMA in order to properly process your return. Please contact us via phone or email if you need to return something. Again, we will be glad to help. Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Restocking Fee:No

BMW's new i concepts revealed

Mon, 01 Aug 2011

It was meant to be a modest, intimate affair for a select group of media. Yet as we flew to Frankfurt the day before the unveiling of BMW's i3 and i8 concept cars, it became quite clear that this was not to be the case. With hundreds of journalists flown in from all over, a live web broadcast to the rest of the globe, and, for the first time in history, the entire BMW board present in one room, project i is clearly vital to BMW's future product strategy.

Barrichello wins for Brawn in Monza

Sun, 13 Sep 2009

Barrichello wins the Italian Grand Prix in Monza The Brawns trailed Hamilton, Raikkonen and Sutil in the first stage of the race with their one-stop strategy, but the dividends of that strategy paid off with the Brawn duo taking the lead after the second pit stops by McLaren, Ferrari and Force India. Hamilton, in the McLaren, had a good race, and was challenging Button for second place in the closing stages. But, having got to within a second of Button on the last lap, he crashed out – probably by trying a bit too hard.

'Paradox' in transport policy claim

Tue, 26 Nov 2013

THERE IS A "paradox at the heart" of the Government's roads programme, a transport policy professor has told MPs. The question on whether traffic levels would increase or decrease in the future was unresolved, University College London emeritus professor of transport policy Phil Goodwin told the House of Commons Transport Committee. The paradox was that if traffic levels increased the planned roads programme was "not big enough to make an improvement", he said.