Outboard Electric Trolling Motor Fishing Boat Engine 40lbs 12v Short Shaft 40cm on 2040-parts.com
Monroe Township, New Jersey, United States
Complete Trolling Motors for Sale
- 65lbs 12v heavy duty electric trolling motor engine outboard motor fishing boat(US $172.03)
- Outboard electric trolling motor fishing boat engine 40lbs 12v short shaft 40cm(US $115.00)
- Electric outboard motor fishing boat engine rubber boats trolling motor 40lbs(US $115.02)
- Minn kota riptide terrova® 55 trolling motor w/wireless remote - 12v - 55lb - 60(US $2,632.04)
- Electric outboard motor fishing boat engine rubber boats trolling motor 40lbs(US $122.36)
- Garmin 010 12832 70 force kraken livescope mounting br(US $135.61)
The Future Role of the Vehicle Designer
Fri, 14 May 2010The vehicle design department at the Royal College of Art hosted the second in a series of five lectures looking at the future of the profession last week. Moving on from the previous week's topic of sustainability, this debate explored the future roles and responsibilities of the vehicle designer. Head of department Dale Harrow began by posing the question "Is it time to rethink – do we still need the car?" Although still relevant, Harrow's ultimate answer to this was that the profession was about to see marked change, with the end to an era where "designers are locked behind closed doors in studios".
Ford enlists James Franco, Rob Riggle for pre-Super Bowl ad
Fri, 31 Jan 2014The wizards of Dearborn have decided to forego purchasing time during the Super Bowl and instead are running a 90-second Ford Fusion Hybrid spot between the coin toss and the kickoff, according to our colleagues at Automotive News. Polymath James Franco stars as Rob Riggle in the above teaser. There is a tiger.
Locke review: a road movie with a difference
Fri, 18 Apr 2014Locke is a road movie with a difference – not to mention an enormous contrast to Need for Speed, which is the last heavy car content film I reviewed on MSN Cars. Simply put, Locke stars Tom Hardy and a BMW X5, and that’s about it. To say very much more than this would actually be to give away the, ahem, driving force of the plot – if you can even call it that.