Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Seachoice Marine Ball Scupper Valve, Self Bailing Boat Drain Clear 50-18271 on 2040-parts.com

US $10.98
Location:

Vero Beach, Florida, US

Vero Beach, Florida, US
Returns Accepted:Returns Accepted Item must be returned within:30 Days Refund will be given as:Money Back Return policy details: Return shipping will be paid by:Buyer Restocking Fee:No

SEACHOICE SELF BAILING SCUPPER.          

   

 

 

Automatically seals and drains self bailing decks.

Made of polycarbonate material.

Solid polyethylene ball and PVC seal mounts on transom above water line.

Small -Fits 3/4"- 1-1/2" Openings. 

 

50-18271

Sold One Each.

New Audi A2 EV Concept – first photos arrive

Wed, 07 Sep 2011

New Audi A2 EV Concept - first photos It wouldn’t be a car show without yet another electric car concept from Audi. The difference at Frankfurt is that the already teased EV from Audi isn’t another in the seemingly endless iteration of e-Tron, instead we’re to get an electric car with a proper Audi tag – the Audi A2 Concept EV. The shame is that Audi seem to have abandoned the range extender route they displayed with the Audi A1 e-Tron – a small Wankel engine in the boot to charge the batteries – and have instead gone down the costly cul-de-sac of a pure EV in the A2.

BMW Hydrogen 7-series

Mon, 04 Jun 2007

By Ben Whitworth Motoring Issues 04 June 2007 07:01 BMW is upping its green credentials with the delivery of a fleet of hydrogen-powered 7-series that will go on chauffeur duty throughout the UK this summer. The eight production-ready Hydrogen 7 luxo-barges are produced on the same production line as the standard 7-series in Munich and meet all current safety and crash regulations. They form part of a 100-strong fleet of liquid hydrogen–powered 7-series models that spearhead BMW’s CleanEnergy programme, and in the UK will be used at high-profile events around the country to underline their environmental profile.

Volvo is working on cordless charging for electric cars

Thu, 31 Oct 2013

Imagine not having to actually exit and plug in your electric car (assuming you have an electric car to plug in), and instead just parking it over a special parking spot. That's the promise of a new technology that Volvo is working on, and if taken to the mass market once made commercially viable, it means electric cars will be able to recharge just by sitting over a charger built into the parking spot's surface. That would certainly eliminate the need for those bulky upright chargers that are spreading around the country.