Auto Meter Electric Fuel Level Gauge Used Vintage Untested on 2040-parts.com
USA, US
Fuel Gauges for Sale
- Stewart warner maximum performance electrical fuel pressure gauge 2 1/16" dia(US $92.49)
- Stewart warner maximum performance electrical fuel pressure gauge 2 1/16" dia(US $92.49)
- Autometer carbon fiber ultra-lite electrical fuel level gauge 2 5/8" dia 4816(US $77.92)
- Edelbrock qwikdata non-contact analog thermocouple(US $559.97)
- Edelbrock qwikdata fuel flow meter 91122(US $1,899.97)
- Edelbrock data acquisition qwikdata 2 data logger 4 mb memory each 91160(US $1,617.99)
Audi, Honda, Hyundai, and GM to bring Android to cars
Tue, 07 Jan 2014General Motors, Audi, Honda and Hyundai have joined forces with Google and Nvidia to form the Open Automotive Alliance (OAA), their overarching goal being the integration of Google's Android software into automotive infotainment systems. The OAA will use Android's open development model to bring a greater variety of functions to car infotainment systems, which have noticeably lagged behind smartphones when it comes to capability due to long development periods, fast changing technology, and a glut variety of incompatible systems. The alliance's first order of business will be to develop new Android platform features to enable the car to become a connected Android device.
James May does Isle of Man TT run in electric Motor Bike made from Meccano
Mon, 02 Sep 2013James May & Oz Clark in their electric Meccano Motor Bike & Sidecar in the Isle of Man With Top Gear on a break, Messrs Clarkson, May and Hammond have the chance to go out and do their own projects. And one of those is James May’s Toy Stories. And it seems James May has been out on the Isle of Man filming for a Christmas Special for his Toy Stories series, together with long-standing sidekick on other projects, Oz Clarke.
At GM, the tail fin is back--but now it's a blade
Mon, 03 May 2010Tail fins are making a comeback at General Motors Co., although they are a far cry from the saillike appendages of the 1950s. And this time the company is calling them blades. The look, pioneered on the Chevrolet Volt to improve aerodynamics, will appear on other models to boost fuel economy, said Ed Welburn, GM's global design chief.