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The chassis is that in the Ford 8 and 10 HP. The Fairlite was the first full Fiberglass developed by the Walklett Brothers. The car was originally built as a Kit car based on the Ford 8 and 10 HP 7.5 ft (2.3 m) wheelbase, but the body could be fit to many other chassis, with the most common other chassis being fit being the Buckler MK V .
The Nine has a 972 cc (59.3 cu in) overhead cam engine, based on earlier design of the 848 cc (51.7 cu in) engine seen in the 8HP Junior. An early version, with notable differences appeared in the aforementioned "Junior Nine", the short-lived interim model shown at the 1931 Olympia Motor Show four months before the Nine's introduction. [1]
The M37 105 mm howitzer motor carriage (named T76 105 mm HMC during development starting in 8 July 1943 [2]) was developed by the US on an extended M24 Chaffee base, and was intended to be the successor to the 105 mm M7 Priest.
The Ford Mondeo Mk IV [3] (third generation), codenamed CD345, was officially unveiled in five-door production form by Ford in late 2006. It is based on the EUCD platform, which was developed in collaboration with Volvo, the platform was the same as that used in the new large MPVs Galaxy and S-MAX, but not the North American Ford Fusion or the Mazda Atenza in Japan.
Several prototypes were also built. In 1949, proposal for an improved 26 hp (19 kW) 401E-424E and a 33 hp (24 kW) 403E-424E saw only six examples built. [10] Following this, in 1951, the factory produced the 403-424A coupé with a 35 hp (26 kW) four. The "stunning" 404 Sport of 1954 used a new, 58 hp (43 kW) overhead valve hemi engine. [9]
The HP 35s (F2215A) is a Hewlett-Packard non-graphing programmable scientific calculator. Although it is a successor to the HP 33s, it was introduced to commemorate the 35th anniversary of the HP-35, Hewlett-Packard's first pocket calculator (and the world's first pocket scientific calculator). HP also released a limited production anniversary ...
Perhaps the HP-42S was to be released as a replacement for the aging HP-41 series as it is designed to be compatible with all programs written for the HP-41. Since it lacked expandability, and lacked any real I/O ability, both key features of the HP-41 series, it was marketed as an HP-15C replacement.