Electrical Systems for Sale
- Suzuki marine 09933-19880 09933-19880 harness(US $26.87)
- A127 70 amp lucas alternator rover perkins marine bmc massey right hand fit(US $49.99)
- Mercury sport jet 240hp engine wiring harness(US $125.00)
- Igntion coil spark diamond e-035 for use with external resister(US $17.99)
- Mercruiser alternator 862031(US $65.00)
- Boat engine systems monitor check gauge bat/ temp / oil / alt and alarm panel(US $29.99)
Suzuki Swift Sport gets 5 doors & costs £14,249
Wed, 10 Jul 2013The new Suzuki Swift Sport 5-door (pictured) offers a more practical option to the Sport The Suzuki Swift Sport arrived in the UK at the end of 2011, and although it wasn’t exactly the sort of hot hatch that would make a Fiesta ST quake in its boots it did up the fun factor from Suziki’s more than decent Swift. In fact, the 3-door Swift Sport did a bit more than up the fun factor, it got Australia’s advertising authorities up in arms about its ‘suggestive’ advertising and got itself banned from Ozzie TV for being too ‘hot’. Which probably didn’t do sales any harm at all.
Skoda CitiJet Concept revealed – heading for Worthersee
Thu, 22 May 2014Skoda CitiJet Concept – created by students What you see in the Skoda CitiJet Concept (above) is what you get if you let 16 Skoda design students loose and tell them to take the CitiGo and turn it in to their ideal concept car. The Skoda CitiJet – which will be joining the SEAT Ibiza Cupster and Audi A3 Clubsport at Worthersee – took six months to create and gets its roof removed as well as its back seats – where there are roll-over bars instead – a rear wing twin exhausts and 16″ alloys with red brake calipers lurking beneath. Under the bonnet sits the regular 1.0 litre 3-cylinder petrol engine with 74 bhp you’ll find in the normal CitiGo, and the interior is lifter straight out of the CitiGo Sport so there’s red stitching to make everything look a bit more ‘sporty’, a leather steering wheel and Sport seats.
Engineers 'most likely' to crash
Wed, 04 Jun 2014BUILDERS and bakers are among the best drivers while engineers and estate agents are among the worst, according to a survey. Based on accident figures per profession, the survey showed that persons classing themselves as 'administrators' were the safest drivers, followed by painters and farmers. Builders were the sixth-safest on the list compiled by insurance company 1st Central, with bakers eighth.