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Kvh Tracvision Receiver on 2040-parts.com

Location:

Palm Beach Gardens, Florida, United States

Palm Beach Gardens, Florida, United States
Condition:Used Brand:KVH

KVH TracVision Receiver. Includes all items in the picture. Any questions? Feel free to contact.

The cars of Ayrton Senna

Thu, 01 May 2014

Twenty years ago today – 1 May 1994 – the world lost arguably the most talented Formula One driver ever: Ayrton Senna. Numbers alone don’t quite describe the genius the Brazilian driver showed at the wheel of all manner of cars throughout his career, finding time and speed where others simply couldn’t. So, on the 20th anniversary of Senna’s death in a tragic accident at the 1994 San Marino Grand Prix at Imola – only a day after Roland Ratzenberger, a young Austrian driver and friend of Senna, also sadly lost his life, while qualifying – we’re celebrating the life of one of Formula One’s most charismatic drivers.

2012 Range Rover Sport tweaks. But where’s the quicker TDV6?

Thu, 07 Jul 2011

2012 Range Rover Sport - tweaked and titivated Yesterday we has raft of itsy-bitsy little changes to the 2012 Disco to make it just that little bit better than it already is. And make you question the sanity of forking out for a Range Rover. Now it’s the turn of the 2012 Range Rover Sport.

Car makers to be forced to disclaim ‘Official’ economy figures

Wed, 10 Apr 2013

We’ve banged on for a long time about the futility of official economy figures, especially as car makers get better and better at ‘gaming’ the official economy tests to produce the results they want. Much of the impetus to create the best headline economy figure for a car is driven by taxation, with car makers well aware that the better the official economy results are, the lower their CO2 will be (CO2 isn’t tested for – it’s just extrapolated from the official mpg) and the more appealing the car will be to buyers, particularly fleet buyers. But a ruling by the Advertising Standards Agency (ASA) against Audi could at least see car makers having to admit in their adverts that the ‘official’ economy figure bears no relation to what owners can expect to achieve in the real world.