Uniden Atlantis 270 Floating Handheld Wireless Marine Radio Communication Signal on 2040-parts.com
Carriere, Mississippi, United States
Radio & Communications for Sale
- Garmin gdl 30a xm satellite receiver(US $35.00)
- Jensen boat remote stereo audio control mwr75 | wired 2 inch silver(US $96.04)
- Garmin protective cover for vhf 100/200 series sun cover(US $69.99)
- Audison boat digital media receiver amr-20 bluetooth with 4-6.5" rgb speakers(US $449.99)
- Uniden america vhf radio um725gbt fixed mount(US $334.07)
- Czone mastervolt bep 80-911-0090-00 wireless interface module(US $645.00)
Video: Aston Martin design chief on new Rapide
Thu, 03 Dec 2009CAR recently caught up with Aston Martin design chief Marek Reichman – on board one of the first Aston Rapides to be built. You can watch our video interview in the player below, as CAR contributor Guy Bird interviews Reichman. He talks about the new Rapide, and why it shouldn't be seen as a rival for a Merc S-class or even a Porsche Panamera, the crazy new Cygnet – a Toyota iQ by Aston Martin – and the new million-pound One-77 hypercar.
First Sight: Mercedes-AMG GT
Wed, 10 Sep 2014“If I was to buy any sports car that wasn't a Mercedes, it'd be a Porsche 911,” says Mercedes' head of design, Gorden Wagener. “But when you see the two cars together, we think ours has the edge.” He's talking about the new Mercedes-AMG GT, a front-mid engined, two-seater sports car that's unashamedly aimed at higher-end 911s, and we've come to see it at Mercedes' Sindelfingen studio. The GT replaces the larger SLS, and is seen by Wagener as the best example yet of his 'sensual purity' design philosophy: “The SLS is very much [he gestures] line, line with a surface in between. With the GT we started with the surface and worked to refine and reduce the number of lines.” Elements of the SLS's platform have been carried over, so the GT measures the same 1,939mm wide.
Toyota's Lentz to say electronics not to blame for acceleration problems
Tue, 23 Feb 2010Toyota Motor Sales U.S.A. President James Lentz plans to stick to his guns and tell skeptical lawmakers Tuesday that the company's unwanted acceleration problems do not stem from electronic defects, a copy of his testimony shows. Lentz's reiteration of Toyota's longstanding position suggests that top company executives were unmoved by sharp criticism of that stance Monday by House Energy and Commerce Committee Chairman Henry Waxman.