Dehavilland Dash-7 Rnav Flight Deck Manual on 2040-parts.com
Crown Point, New York, United States
This is an RNAV Pilot's guide produced for the Jet Electronic Technology
DAC 7000. It is in very good used condition and was part of the fight
deck equipment documents USED aboard Dehavilland Dash 7 airplane. Appears
complete. NO RESERVE!
|
NAV/COMs for Sale
- Ky-196a comm transceiver
- 1976 cessna 177b and cardinal owner's manual(US $67.56)
- Hoof hydraulic double acting propeller governor model 1000007 service manual(US $177.56)
- Piper pa-31 navajo chieftain coffee mugs.(US $25.00)
- Narco nav 825 tso(US $445.00)
- Bendix king ky-197 comm transceiver, p/n 064-1021-00, 14v(US $950.00)
Supercars Accelerate Ahead Of Family Motors In The Used Market
Tue, 03 Jun 2014DREAM machines, like Ferraris and Lamborghinis, out-performed every other vehicle on Britain's roads when it came to secondhand values over the past 12 months. That’s the view of independent car information experts CAP Automotive. According to the firm’s research, increasing demand from wealthier motorists kept average used values in the Supercar sector almost unchanged on a year ago - while every other sector fell by as much as ten per cent.
Mitsubishi Shogun (2006): first official pictures
Fri, 08 Sep 2006By Chris Chilton First Official Pictures 08 September 2006 00:01 The lowdown Not an all-new car but a fairly serious revision of the legendary off-roader. Mitsubishi has ditched the old car’s dated-looking curves with much straighter, angular lines inspired by the 1979 Pajero II concept car. It’s not exactly Range Rover suave but the result should keep the Caravan Club happy.
Porsche Panamera – Best selling Porsche in the U.S.
Tue, 11 May 2010The Porsche Panamera - best-selling Porsche in the US The Porsche Panamera elicited pretty much the same response from the Porsche aficionados when it was revealed as the Cayenne did seven years ago – raise arms in horror; shriek about wrecking the brand and proclaim the end of Porsche as the latest sacrilege will bring the company to its knees. Wrong. Again.