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Bendix King Kln-94 Ifr Gps on 2040-parts.com

Location:

Whitewright, Texas, United States

Whitewright, Texas, United States
Removed from a 2003 Cessna T206H for upgrade to Garmin GTN-750. Unit worked and operated normally when removed 3/16/16.
Brand:Bendix King Warranty:No Manufacturer Part Number:KLN 94

KLN 94 IFR GPS great working unit removed from a Cessna T206H for upgrade to Garmin GTN 750. Includes GPS unit, mounting tray, and operators manual. 

U.S. offers advance peek at 'cash for guzzlers' rules

Fri, 24 Jul 2009

Dealers participating in the "cash for guzzlers" program must visit www.cars.gov to find a list of facilities that may qualify for scrapping vehicles and then make sure the company can crush or shred trade-ins, according to preliminary rules on the Web site. The government posted the rules today for the program, designed to lift U.S. light-vehicle sales from 27-year lows.

Porsche Panamera S E-Hybrid does 62mpg in the hands of motoring journalists

Tue, 28 May 2013

The Porsche Panamera S E-Hybrid – a Panamera with a plug-in hybrid powertrain – arrives last month, along with a 2013 facelift for the Panamera range , complete with claims from Porsche that it could do 91mpg. That was never going to happen in the real world, but Porsche has followed up its official economy figures with a degree of proof that the Panamera E-Hybrid can actually achieve very impressive economy numbers in the real world, and in the hands of motoring journalists – a group not renowned for their light touch on the throttle. At a press event in Hockenheim, Porsche let car journalists loose on the Panamera E-Hybrid for a total of 42 drives over a total distance of 750 miles and returned an average of 62mpg.

Council Street Light Switch Off Policy Challenged

Fri, 04 Jul 2014

THE AA has raised concerns over the practice of turning off street lights at night, saying that councils are "ignoring the findings of road-accident inquests" in their bid to save money. The motoring organisation cited the fact that at least five pedestrians and a cyclist have been killed since 2009 because, according to accident investigators at inquests, drivers had little or no chance of avoiding the collisions on blacked-out roads with speed limits of 40mph or higher. The AA added that although some councils have recognised the danger and turned their street lights back on, others were "ignoring inquest findings".