Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Snatch 20' X 3/4" Kinetic Recovery Rope Tow Strap 19,000 Lbs Braided on 2040-parts.com

Location:

HK, Hong Kong

HK, Hong Kong
Condition:New Brand:Jorge.Motor Breaking Strength:19,000 lbs Color:Red & Black Material:Synthetic Fiber Package includes:1X Synthetic Winch Rope Attribute:Hook is not included Size:3/4" thickness X 20' Long Warranty:Yes Manufacturer Part Number:Does Not Apply Country/Region of Manufacture:Hongkong UPC:Does Not Apply

Aston Martin. Burj Al Arab Hotel. Helicopter. Mix & Serve.

Fri, 18 Jan 2013

As part of Aston Martin’s Centenary celebrations in Dubai, an Aston Martin Vanquish has been helicoptered to the top of the Burj Al Arab hotel. There’s no more extra power on offer from the centenary edition Astons, but they do get a special paint job and interior and come with solid silver enamelled plaques commemorating the centenary, even if Aston Martin seem to have only been able to cobble together a Vanquish Centenary Edition so far. But things have got a bit more spectacular in Dubai, with Aston Martin using a helicopter to stick a Vanquish on the helipad of the Burj Al Arab hotel in Dubai, 1,000 ft up at the top of the iconic sail-shaped building.

Who's Where: John Puskar and Liz Wetzel appointed to new roles at GM Design

Tue, 10 Aug 2010

As part of an ongoing strategy at General Motors, this past month has seen a series of moves taking place within the company's design organization in Europe and the US. Two of the key changes have been the appointment of John Puskar to the role of Director of Cross-Brand Strategy, C&T and Components in North America, and that of Liz Wetzel, who has been named Director of GME Design Interior – effectively filling Puskar's role. Puskar, who until recently headed the Opel/Vauxhall Interior Design at the European Design Center in Russelsheim, Germany, majored in Industrial Design at the Cleveland Institute of Art and worked at Ford in both the USA and Germany before joining General Motors as a creative designer at the GMC Brand Center in 1999.

MIT develops self-transforming materials that behave 'like robots without robots'

Wed, 15 Oct 2014

A cross-disciplinary research lab at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) has developed a suite of programmable materials, including carbon fiber, printed wood grain, textile composites, rubbers and plastics, that self-transform when exposed to an external stimulus. Director of the Self-Assembly Lab, Skylar Tibbits, presented a TED talk on 4D printing in 2013, where he demonstrated how a flat sheet of material could effectively build itself when exposed to water, like a robot without a robot. Following positive feedback from industries including aviation, automotive and manufacturing, his lab has been working on developing materials that change according to different activation sources, including heat, light, and air pressure, in addition to water – all of which have automotive relevance.