Compasses for Sale
Scandinavian lr40dc lr40-v3,6 digital gyro repeater(US $179.60)
Vintage taylor instrument co navigator compass 2980 boat car truck(US $35.00)
Ritchie navigation xp-98w xp-98w x-port tactician surface mount boat compass(US $110.00)
Furuno pg-1000 heading sensor compass only – 90 day warr – tested!(US $349.99)
Vintage sestrel black nautical navigation marine ship boat compass with bracket(US $129.99)
Riviera aries boat marine compass 2" 1/2 white/black/blue(US $55.90)
2014 Mercedes-Benz C-Class Estate: 10 things to know
Wed, 21 May 2014Mercedes-Benz has revealed full details of the new 2014 C-Class Estate. Based on the latest C-Class saloon, this fourth-generation wagon is packed with technology to make it better, cleaner, safer and more fun to drive. Which means it’s also poised to really give the Audi A4 Avant and BMW 3 Series Touring a run for their money.
'American Nitro' is back!
Wed, 09 Apr 2014"Seventies drag-race mayhem is back!" bills "American Nitro," a schlocky drive-in exploitation film whose only quote of praise, from a dog-eared period issue of "Car Craft," reads, simply, "SPECTACULAR CRASHES!" Director Bill Kimberlin says that he made "American Nitro" in 1979 as a response to Tom Wolfe's influential 1965 essay, "The Kandy-Kolored Tangerine-Flake Streamline Baby." "I was just getting out of high school in a small town in Northern California when Wolfe's book came out," he said. "Nitro came about as my response to the car culture I was exposed to in the small valley town of Boonville, Calif. Instead of 'American Graffiti,' I made 'American Nitro.'" A fitting comparison, in fact, considering Kimberlin later worked for George Lucas at ILM, starting with" Return of the Jedi." Now the movie is being released on DVD for the first time -- beware of bootlegs, warns the website -- and digitally remastered, while retaining the explosive charm and goofy narration of the 1979 original.
Rude roads hit house prices
Tue, 25 Feb 2014STREETS with rude-sounding names like Crotch Crescent, Turkey Cock Lane, Bell End and The Knob could turn out to be a haven for property hunters looking to snap up a bargain, research suggests. The study for website NeedaProperty.com looked for evidence of what impact living in a street with a suggestive name could have on the value of your home. Properties on streets with innuendo-laden names were found to be around one fifth or £84,000 cheaper on average than other homes situated nearby.


