Chief velocity target #22. Face on target has no scratches and have been tested. Stem has been checked on lathe for being straight if bent it has been replaced. Happy bidding. Please ask if you have any questions. Have other targets availible. Virginia sales will be charged sales tax
Frame Machines for Sale
- Chief velocity target #8(US $99.99)
- Mo clamp 0550 tight opening pulling clamp, 1-1/2", industrial and frame machine(US $120.00)
- Mo-clamp #10 tool board w/tools (pu5078), frame rack machine pulling(US $1,785.00)
- Mo clamp dyna-mo jr pulling clamp 0305 industrial and frame machine(US $80.00)
- Frame machine chain .. 8 foot 3/8 chain with claw hook .. grade 70(US $49.00)
- Clamp single jaw versatil with pull plate grip 4 fast pulls new s/stock usa made(US $38.00)
Higher speed limits 'save lives'
Fri, 28 Feb 2014AN INCREASE in the speed limits on some roads in Denmark has reduced traffic collisions and cut road deaths. The two-year trial has also found that higher speed limits on motorways have helped lower the number of accidents. The Danish road directorate conducted the trial on rural two-way roads where there had previously been an 80km/h (50mph) speed limit and increased it to 90km/h (56mph).
McLaren F1 Video: Flemke’s Mac’s been fixed
Fri, 14 Oct 2011Flemke's McLaren F1 on video Perhaps the best-know McLaren F1 in the UK – well, perhaps the best known apart from Rowan Atkinson’s recently bent F1 – is the F1 owned by regular online commenter ‘Flemke’. Flemke is, as you would expect, worth a few bob and lives in the UK. But unlike the vast majority of McLaren F1 owners he loves to share the joy of his Mac with online enthusiasts.
1959 Ferrari 250 GT LWB Berlinetta ‘Tour de France’ fetches £1.96 million
Sun, 04 Nov 2012A 1959 Ferrari 250 GT LWB Berlinetta ‘Tour de France’ sold for £1.96 million as the star of R.M. Auction’s 2012 London sale. Star sale of the night in Battersea was a hugely desirable 1959 Ferrari 250 GT LWB Berlinetta ‘Tour de France’ by Carrozzeria Scaglietti which managed to reach £1.96 million (although a 1955 Mercedes-Benz 300SL Alloy Gullwing failed to sell at £2.4 million), but there were plenty of other lots reaching decent prices too.