Find or Sell any Parts for Your Vehicle in USA

Truck / Rv Trailer Light Adapter 7 Way Round To 4 Way Flat Hopkins 47355 on 2040-parts.com

C $15.97
Location:

Bowmanville, Ontario, Canada

Bowmanville, Ontario, Canada
Condition:New Brand:HOPKINS TOWING SOLUTIONS Country/Region of Manufacture:United States Manufacturer Part Number:47355

This is the adapter you require if you have a newer RV, or Pickup Truck with the 7 blade round trailer light plug in the bumper, and your trailer is a standard 4 wire flat plug (see picture #2).

Genuine Hopkins USA quality adapter.  Plug in simple!  Plug the adapter into your vehicle, plug your trailer harness into the adapter, done.

Hint: When not in use store this adapter inside your vehicle.  It's the hottest item on a thief's quick grab list & will be gone if simply left inserted your vehicle's trailer light socket :)    Take it from me (loser of several).

Jay Leno learns to drive his own McLaren MP4-12C at Dunsfold +video

Mon, 18 Jul 2011

Jay Leno learns to drive his McLaren MP4-12C You happen to be one of the worlds’s best-known petrolheads, and you also own one of just 64 McLaren F1 road cars ever made. So when the company that made your McLaren F1 decides to make a new car – albeit not quite at the same exalted level of supercardom as the F1 – you have to have one. So you phone McLaren and place an order.

Gordon Murray T25

Mon, 28 Jun 2010

Gordon Murray Design has unveiled the T25 prototype, a car that the company's founder, Gordon Murray, has long talked about as the vehicle that will revolutionize the automotive industry. At just 2400mm long, 1300mm wide and 1600mm high, the T25 occupies a greatly reduced footprint in comparison to a Smart ForTwo or Toyota iQ. The T25 seats three, with a central driver flanked by two rearward passengers, in a formation reminiscent of Murray's most famous work to date – the McLaren F1.

Former Ford exec Theodore shows off lighter chassis at SAE

Mon, 11 Apr 2011

Automakers are facing tougher government regulations for fuel economy, and one former Ford and Chrysler executive says he has a solution Chris Theodore, best known for his work on the Ford GT and Dodge Viper, has designed a vehicle chassis that he says will provide automakers with weight savings, cut manufacturing costs and make electric vehicles more economically viable. Theodore is showcasing his proof-of-concept Uni-Chassis at the SAE World Congress this week. It uses the powertrain and suspension of the GT, under an agreement with Ford.