Reliable Copper Wire Battery Cable 50cm Length M10 Ring Terminals For Truck on 2040-parts.com
Los Angeles, California, United States
Power Inverters for Sale
- Reliable copper wire battery cable 50cm length m10 ring terminals for truck(US $47.64)
- 12v 3 way car cigarette lighter socket in car charger adapter splitter usb port(US $17.90)
- Scosche (invert 200) 200w portable power inverter(3 ac outlets/ 4 usb ports) new(US $24.99)
- 12-24v cigarette lighter power socket plug outlet base for car motorcycle truck(US $16.82)
- Driver board boost step module 12-25v to 35-85v 10-42 m9n33088-(US $)
- Projecta 500w 12v pure sine wave inverter pw500(AU $399.00)
Major restrictions suggested for learner drivers
Fri, 11 Oct 2013A NEW report on potential changes to young driver training could cut accident casualties by more than 4,000 a year. The report, from transport research group TRL, recommends teenagers should not be allowed to take their driving test until they are 18, rather than the current threshold of 17. They would have to have a 12-month "learner stage" beginning at 17 with a requirement for at least 100 hours of day-time and 20 hours of night-time supervised practice.
New BMW M3 and M4 revealed for 2014
Thu, 12 Dec 2013This is it, folks – this is your early petrolheaded Christmas present: BMW has released full details of the new BMW M3 Saloon and M4 Coupe. And we do mean full details. Output of 431 turbocharged horsepower is the headline, but really it’s the extent of the engineering overhaul carried out by BMW’s M division that really stuns the senses here.
Mazda sells 10 millionth car in America
Wed, 23 Oct 2013The first car Mazda ever sold in America was the R100, a cute lil' two-door fastback that was, unsurprisingly, rotary-powered. The year was 1970. Iggy Pop had made that much explicitly clear with "1970." Just imagine how weird it must have been for Americans to wrap their minds around some tiny Japanese upstart, selling a car approximately the size of a 1970 Cadillac Fleetwood Brougham's wheelwell, powered by -- what's this, German technology?