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Ranger Boats Owens Corning 324-3b 24oz 25" Woven Roving Marine Fiberglass on 2040-parts.com

US $298.95
Location:

Racine, Wisconsin, United States

Racine, Wisconsin, United States
Condition:New other (see details) Size:25" Country/Region of Manufacture:United States Color:White Manufacturer Part Number:GLS:7101386 Brand:Ranger Boats Boat Brand Part Number:GLS:7101386 MPN:324-3B Main Color:White manufacturer:Owens Corning Item_Condition:New other (see details) Material:Fiberglass country_of_manufacture:United States Part Brand:Owens Corning Type:Woven Roving

American icon, reborn: the 1967 Shelby GT500CR Continuation Car (2010): first official pictures

Thu, 18 Mar 2010

We all have fantasies about meeting long dead heroes, dreams like seeing the Beatles play onstage, going dirt bike riding with Steve McQueen, or talking politics with JFK. Until they improve cloning technology, we won't be heading out to the desert with Steve, but there is one legend that is reborn and ready to ride. An Oklahoma based custom coachbuilder called Classic Recreations announced at the auto-industry love-fest called SEMA last November that they had struck a deal with Shelby American to put one of the most famous Ford muscle cars ever built back into production - the 1967 Shelby GT500.

Lexus CT 200h: Supercharged CT 200h at New York

Tue, 29 Mar 2011

Fox Marketing prepares a supercharged Lexus CT 200h for the New York Motor Show We’ve constantly bemoaned that Lexus are so obsessed with hybrids that they’ve forgotten there’s a world of people who want more from a car than a mere transport appliance. Which is rather sad. More than the rest of the range, we’ve complained that the Lexus CT 200h is lumbered with the 1.8 litre Atkinson cycle hybrid from the Prius as its only powertrain option.

GPS signals trump cellular in FCC battle

Tue, 28 Feb 2012

Bandwidth has become a precious commodity. Just ask any owner of a car that has an analog OnStar system that wound up being a useless brick when digital cellular signals were declared to be the only game in town. LightSquared, a company that grew out of the satellite-communications industry, is banking that the chunk of spectrum it holds the rights to will help smaller, regional competitors compete with the big wireless providers.