4 Silver Polk Audio Marine 6.5" Speakers, Fusion Msra50 Am Fm Ipod Aux Receiver on 2040-parts.com
Monsey, New York, United States
Parts & Accessories for Sale
- Marine 6.5" polk audio 2way speakers, dual marine ipod bluetooth cd usb receiver(US $199.99)
- Jensen marine stereo cover radio splash guard white model mrh211w ***new in box(US $74.99)
- Mounting brackets for marine boat speakers pair new(US $12.99)
- Bazooka mt-qra-bl (mtqrabl) tubbie quick-release adapters(US $37.99)
- 1999 -2000 honda civic radio am-fm-stereo cd cassette m1c402033(US $29.99)
- Brand new stinger marine ofc copper conductors rca cable 13 feet 4 meters smrca4(US $10.99)
Tanner Foust jumps a Hot Wheels truck to new record at Indy
Tue, 31 May 2011Before the Indianapolis 500 on Sunday, Team Hot Wheels yellow driver and three-time X Games gold medalist Tanner Foust broke the world record for distance jump in a four-wheeled vehicle. Foust dropped 10 stories down a life-size version of the iconic orange toy track and soared 332 feet through the air. Foust then unmasked himself--his identity had been a mystery up to that point, as shown in the teaser video we posted earlier this month.
Video: Fiat creates café racer 500 for SEMA
Tue, 30 Oct 2012Fiat is preparing a café racer-style 500 for this week's SEMA show by stripping down an Abarth version to take it "down to the essence of what you need to drive a car." The café racer philosophy of ‘more speed, less comfort' was born around the 1960s British 'biker scene and while initially focussed on increasing performance, quickly developed into a culture as concered with 'the show' as 'the go'. "It takes something like this to really get noticed at SEMA," says Craig Buoncompago, Project Manager at Fiat Product Design. "The Café Racer is really going to be one special car that you guys should really come and see." The 500's roof has been chopped, while also shorn of its door handles and being fitted with hot rod billet rims.
The world’s most dangerous roads by country
Mon, 21 Oct 2013Pulitzer Center A staggering 1.24 million people are killed on the world’s roads every year and the numbers are rising. If current trends continue there will be a three-fold increase to 3.6 million road deaths a year globally by 2030. A new interactive map by the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting presents these sobering statistics in detail, revealing the countries with the most and least dangerous roads on Earth.