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Scraping option
February 22, 2012
The new Caterpillar 621H, 623H and 627H scrapers are said to deliver productivity and operator comfort and efficiency.
Increasing asphalt plant and compaction supplies
February 22, 2012
Teknomak, along with its president Saruhan Sarioglu, will celebrate a 20-year friendship with the Ammann Group in 2011.
Fly or drive
February 22, 2012
A US manufacturer aims to meet international demand for a car that can also fly. The vehicle is rather snappily called The Transition and is being built by a firm called Terrafugia. The vehicle requires a conventional airstrip for take-offs and landings, however its wings can also be folded back so that it can be driven on the road like a car and even parked in a garage. Its single engine drives the propellor when the vehicle is in the air and also turns the wheels when it is being driven on the ground. The
Better detection
February 22, 2012
Parker Hannifin has improved its range of icount online particle and moisture detectors. The firm now offers an innovative self-contained, portable device for measuring quality and cleanliness of hydraulic oils and fuels. Called the icountOS (Oil Sampler), this competitively priced system features a laser detection particle counter, battery and pump.
Dutch tunnel planned to reduce congestion
February 22, 2012
A new tunnel is being proposed in the Netherlands between The Hague and Delft.
Practical classic?
February 22, 2012
A VW enthusiast has gone to great lengths to recover the wreck of a particularly rare model. The VW, a 1957 Samba, had been pushed into a Swiss lake in 1974 when its previous owner became distressed at the vehicle's gearbox problems. However, the model, which features no less than 23 windows with eight in the roof alone, is one of the most sought after VW Campers and when one avid enthusiast heard of its existence, he hired a remote-controlled submersible to try to find it. After a search the submersible lo
Holy reasonable
February 22, 2012
A cycle helmet manufacturer has recently launched what it calls the Angel Bicycle Helmet. This device features an LED fitted around the rim of the helmet and which glows in low light conditions, helping alert other road users to the presence of the wearer. The device has attracted some scepticism from cyclists however who have commented that wearing a halo on the head at night may well attract unfavourable responses from religious zealots.
Signing off
February 22, 2012
A British man, irritated by the poor grammar on the sign denoting the area where he lives, decided to take matters into his own hands. Armed with a tin of black paint and a brush, he added an apostrophe so that St Johns Close in the town of Tunbridge Wells became St John's Close.
Lost in transit
February 22, 2012
An Australian pensioner sparked concern when he became lost on a short drive to the shops to buy a newspaper one morning. The 81-year-old man ended up 600km away and explained to police after that he had continued with his journey because he enjoyed driving.
Round and around
February 22, 2012
A UK competition has been launched to find the country's best roundabout, which results in the greatest driving pleasure during its use. Motorists are also being asked to suggest which could be the country's worst roundabouts. The competition is called Roundabout Idol and has been set up by car leasing firm Central Contracts, which says it will highlight the UK's best and worst roundabouts in this national competition. The UK's first roundabout was built in Letchworth Garden City in 1909.