Racing Electronics Re005 Headset - 2way 1 Talk Port Behind The Head Legacy 27031 on 2040-parts.com
OK, United States
Racing Radios for Sale
- Stilo ae0210 speaker earcup stilo mic s headphones, helmet, stilo mic, foam ear(C $276.07)
- Re-24 racing electronics headphones red with dual volume adjust tested(US $28.99)
- Racing electronics re705 flex boom helmet kit(US $109.99)
- Raceceiver scanner car harness 3.5 jumper baofeng kenwood car harness(US $49.99)
- Raceceiver rookie driver earpiece earbuds for fusion+ & element drivers radio(US $24.00)
- Racing electronics re 1000 racing scanner with 1 headset and clear re bag(US $150.00)
Private Toyota Friend social network lets owners talk to their cars and each other
Mon, 23 May 2011Toyota is launching a social-networking service that will enable owners to engage in verbal dialogue with their Toyota cars. They can share the exchanges in the network and broadcast them via Facebook and Twitter. According to the Associated Press, Toyota is teaming up with U.S.
Lister Knobbly back on track
Tue, 21 Jan 2014Lister The Lister Knobbly - one of the most famous British racing cars of the 1950s - is now available to buy new, with prices starting from £249,000 for track-only versions and £259,000 for road car derivatives. Lister Cars was founded by George Lister in 1954 and its Jaguar-based ‘Lister Knobbly’ race cars were among the most competitive cars in motor racing during the late 1950s. In May 2013 three existing companies - George Lister Engineering of Cambridge, Brian Lister Light Engineering and Lister Storm – were amalgamated following investment by Warranty Wise to create Lister Motor Company Limited.
VW Scirocco and Passat CC (2011): low CO2 tech
Tue, 23 Nov 2010Volkswagen has launched the cleanest and most efficient Scirocco yet. Bluemotion tech is now fitted to the base 2.0-litre turbodiesel and includes stop/start and battery regeneration systems to cut CO2 beneath 120g/km. The six-speed manual Scirocco 138bhp 2.0 TDI now averages 62.8mpg (down from 55.4mpg) while emissions have tumbled to an impressive 118g/km (down from 134g/km).