Vintage Snap-on 1/4" Drive 6" Midget "flextension" Flex Extensiontm61 Nice on 2040-parts.com
Port Matilda, Pennsylvania, US
Sockets & Ratchets for Sale
- Snap on tools 1/4 inch drive 9 mm shallow metric socket 6 point part # tmm9(US $5.95)
- snap on 1/4 dr ratchet, sealed head (high strength) long soft grip rd/blk hndl(US $41.00)
- Mac tools 1/2 drive 24 inch long breaker v24sf(US $10.00)
- Set of 6 metric hex 3/8" dr. socket wrenches,craftsman/1 proto,4,5,6,7,8 & 10mm(US $12.88)
- Snap on metric socket tmm-6 (6 mm) 1/4" drive 6 point very good condition #382(US $9.99)
- Cornwell swivil docket 1/4" drive 6 point u-010 1e 5/16 very good cond #380(US $8.25)
Chevrolet UK has its best ever year
Fri, 09 Jan 2009Now admittedly, Chevrolet UK is not starting from a point of market dominance in the UK, but any manufacturer who has managed to increase sales in 2008 is obviously doing something right. Chevrolet UK has announced that in 2008 it managed to increase its market share in the UK by 12.5%, from 0.76% to 0.86%, with total sales for the year of 18,372 cars (which is only a smidge higher than 2007, but the lower total sales for the UK Car market in 2008 meant a significant increase in market share for Chevrolet). Chevrolet Cruze - Launches in the UK in 2009 These are not figures that are going to frighten the pants off Ford and Vauxhall, but they are an indication that a certain part of the car buying public in the UK are looking at price as a major factor, and are prepared to sacrifice a degree of driving joy to get in to a new car at a lower price.
New Lotus Elise S Cup R track car
Thu, 07 Nov 2013Seems everyone is building non-road legal track day cars right now, and Lotus most definitely wants a piece of that action. Its latest effort is the startling bright and bewinged Elise S Cup R, pictured above. Based on the 1.8-litre supercharged Elise S road car, Lotus has done a lot more than simply lose the number plate here.
Toyota works to make driving while elderly easier, safer
Tue, 23 Apr 2013Japan is getting older -- much older. By some estimates, 30 percent of Japanese city dwellers will be 65 or older by 2040. Never mind its financial implications: This demographic time bomb may be a recipe for on-road mayhem.