Haswing Trolling Motor 80lbs Thrust 24v on 2040-parts.com
Fayetteville, North Carolina, United States
This motor is two months old it is new however it deployed while running across the lake so the motor and the shaft as well as the top control cover is in great condition the base and control is destroyed. Essentially you are buying the working motor set to place in your housing and base. This is a 80# 24V motor. I also have listed the extra components separately as well if you want all of it let me know and we can discuss a complete price.
|
Complete Trolling Motors for Sale
- Vintage phantom bantam boat trolling model m-2 6 or 12 volt(US $70.00)
- Minn kota powerdrive 70_bt - 24v-70lb-54" w/ free mk-210d charger(US $857.05)
- Minn kota 65 65b trolling motor 28lbs thrust 5 speed w/reverse 12 volt works!(US $65.00)
- Minn kota endura 34-lb thrust 36 inch shaft trolling motor works great!(US $99.95)
- Motorguide x5-105fw foot control bow mount trolling motor 105lb-45"-36v(US $1,000.00)
- Sevylor 12v inflatable boat outboard trolling motor
Land Rover sending more Range Rover Evoques to the US
Fri, 20 Jul 2012Land Rover are increasing the supply of the new Range Rover Evoque to the US by a third to help meet demand. In the land where cubic inches are king and any SUV smaller than a Hummer isn’t really an SUV, it’s amazing that the dinky Range Rover Evoque is a hit – but it is. From sales of just 2,200 Evoques in 2011, Land Rover has managed to shift twice that in the first six months of 2012, and Land Rover dealers are still complaining they can’t get enough Evoques to meet demand.
One lap of the Web: Ponycar birthdays, forgotten Hungarian racetracks and an Acura NSX
Fri, 18 Apr 2014Chevy took some time this week to say happy birthday to its archrival, the Ford Mustang. The bowtie brand said that "healthy competition" between the Camaro and Mustang has been a "driving force for constant improvement." Check it out over at World Car Fans. Petrolicious has a handful of photos from a nearly forgotten track in Budapest, Hungary.
The Tokyo motor show 2009 review, by Phil McNamara
Wed, 21 Oct 2009Ch–ch–ch–changes: time to face the strain, presciently sang David Bowie looking forward to the 41st Tokyo Motor Show. Since the 40th show in 2007, the car world has changed economically, politically and technologically. Even the show itself has suffered a pitiful transformation, stripped to just the Japanese firms after the European and American car makers block voted with their feet and jilted the show to save cash.