Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Simrad Ap24 Autopilot Control Pad on 2040-parts.com

Location:

Miami, Florida, United States

Miami, Florida, United States
Condition:Used Brand:Simrad Country/Region of Manufacture:Unknown Manufacturer Part Number:22096614

The AP24 autopilot controller features a compact design, ideal for boats with limited mounting space, and an easy to read, highly visible display. Excellent for all types of leisure craft.

Key Features

  • Clear Display
  • Intuitive Menu
  • Integrated Turn Patterns
  • Dodge Function
  • No Drift Mode
  • Virtual Rudder Feedback
  • Constant Depth Tracking
  • Advanced Wind Steering
  • Rate Of Turn Control
  • Auto Tuning
  • Data Pages
  • Fully Waterproof
  • Matches IS20 Instruments
  • SimNet Network

McLaren P1 bare carbon fibre option

Tue, 11 Jun 2013

McLaren are considering a full bare carbon fibre option for the P1 (pictured) With the McLaren P1 now getting close to hitting the road as a customer car (and arriving at Goodwood on the move in July), the lucky few with pockets deep enough to buy a car that will cost them pushing on £1 million are busy poring over the options for the P1. We spoke to one such customer over the weekend who was busy deciding which boxes to tick on the P1 spec sheet, and he was under the impression that McLaren were offering a full bare carbon fibre option for the P1, and at no cost. Which didn’t sound right.

Ford and Dodge upgrade police patrol vehicles for Michigan State Police test day

Fri, 14 Sep 2012

Ford touted the addition of its 3.7-liter V6 engine to its Police Interceptor sedan, and Dodge boasted about the new Charger Pursuit with all-wheel drive on Thursday. That can only mean that the Michigan State Police force is doing its yearly vehicle testing, and two of the Detroit Three are trying to get noticed. General Motors has its new rear-wheel-drive Caprice to bank on, which we believe is the best of the group.

Carroll held hostage by Tesla Model S

Tue, 04 Dec 2012

Autoweek's senior online editor Rory Carroll was stranded Tuesday morning by a charger stuck in a Tesla Model S. It won't release from the car, and because of that, the car won't run. He took to Twitter this morning for ideas, but has yet to receive a good one.