Anchoring, Docking for Sale
230mm marine anchor roller spring loaded pin stainless steel black nylon(US $46.35)
45 lbs saltwater boat electric windlass anchor winch marine with wireless remote(US $194.17)
22 lbs 12 kg 316 galvanized steel delta style wing boat anchor plow boat anchor(US $80.22)
5in boat low flat cleat 316 stainless steel marine ship deck rope tie(US $13.79)
Marine anchor, 3.5 lb. folding anchor, grapnel anchor kit for kayaks, canoes new(US $20.00)
Brand new suncor eye and eye swivel 1/2" dia. x 6" 316 stainless s0128-0013-c(US $69.99)
Last 2013 MINI leaves the production line to make way for the new 2014 MINI
Thu, 28 Nov 2013The last 2013 MINI rolls off MINI’s production line It’s only ten days since the all new 2014 MINI was revealed, but already production of the current MINI – launched in 2006 – has ended at MINI’s production plant in Oxford. It’s hard to believe, but the current generation of the MIN I has sold over 1 million around the globe in the seven years since it launched, and the BMW MINI – since its re-birth in 2001 – has shifted a grand total of 1,863,289 MINI hatches and 2.4 million MINIs have been built in Oxford since 2001. When the current, 2nd generation BMW MINI, was launched in 2006, it brought with it new turbocharged engines and suspension tweaks to make sure the then ‘new’ MINI continued to offer all the things that make MINI special, but in a more grow-up way.
BMW i3 starts at $42,275
Mon, 22 Jul 2013The electric BMW i3 mini crossover will cost $42,275, including destination, when it debuts to the press on July 29. The company is hosting three simultaneous launch events in London, New York and Beijing. The production version of the car was first seen at the Frankfurt motor show in March.
Post-World War II Japanese tin toys on display in New York
Fri, 14 Aug 2009During the rebuilding of Japan after World War II, a Japanese toy designer took a discarded tin can and molded it into an intricate model car. Just inches in length, it created a phenomenon in the 1940s and '50s in Japan called “buriki.” Buriki is derived from “blik,” which is Dutch for "tin toy." A collection of 70 tin-toy vehicles manufactured in Japan is currently on display at New York's Japan Society Gallery. The exhibit, called “Buriki: Japanese Tin Toys from the Golden Age of the American Automobile, The Yoku Tanaka Collection,” runs until Aug.



