GPS & Chartplotters for Sale
Raymarine c120 gps chartplotter working no fishfinder broken pin connector(US $220.00)
Garmin 010-c1204-00 lakevü ultra u.s. g3 hd - east (010c120400)(US $140.00)
Echopilot incastec maxilog transducer f/ digital speed instrument log distance(US $189.00)
Garmin bluechart g2 eu016r mediterranean southeast sd card charts f/ gpsmap(US $99.00)
Raymarine a98 9" touchscreen mfd chartplotter sonar w/ wifi + downvision e70236(US $480.00)
Airmar p66 garmin transducer triducer 50/200khz depth speed temp 010-10192-01(US $141.55)
The Detroit motor show 2010 review, by Gavin Green
Tue, 12 Jan 2010Motown may not have rediscovered its mojo but at least the car makers formerly known as the Big Three have regained a little bit of their old swagger since the misery of last year’s Detroit show. After all, it’s not every year that two out of three national car makers go bankrupt. The survivor, Ford, unsurprisingly looked the most confident at this year’s show, never mind that its star car was about as hometown as Bauhaus and bratwurst.
Maybach Zeppelin comes over the horizon
Thu, 12 Feb 2009The Maybach Zeppelin - an even bigger waste of money than the standard Maybach Maybach has not exactly been an unmitigated success for Mercedes. Conceived as a competitor for Rolls Royce, it does seem to have carved itself a niche, but probably not the one that Mercedes wanted. Perceived by most as a tarted-up S Class, and bought by the wealthy of the Playstation generation, rather than the Captains of Industry that Mercedes envisioned, the Maybach must be a loss-maker for Mercedes.
Toyota’s Take On Personal Transport Hits The Streets
Tue, 25 Mar 2014JAPANESE car maker Toyota has launched the first public trials of its ultra-compact i-Road electric three-wheeled ‘personal mobility vehicle’ to find out how it shapes up in the cut-and-thrust of real-world urban driving. Consumer testing in Tokyo is set to run through to early June, with 10 of the single-seater vehicles taking to the city streets. The 20 people involved in the programme range from industry experts through to members of the general public, so that Toyota can gain a wide range of feedback on what the i-Road is like to drive, how easy it is to use around town, how it affects people’s decisions about what journeys to make.