Folding Hand Cart 150 LB. Capacity
Compact, collapsible cart fits neatly into overhead luggage compartments; perfect for airline travel. Strong tubular frame cart is lightweight ...
Luggage Carts
Compact, collapsible cart fits neatly into overhead luggage compartments; perfect for airline travel. Strong tubular frame cart is lightweight ...
The Magna Cart holds over 150 lbs, folds so compactly, and is so easy to use!
Glen Woodcock
QMI Agency
Despite all the publicity, the 2012 Chevrolet Volt is still confusing to a lot of people, if the questions I keep getting are any indication.
To answer the most common: yes, Volt can be plugged in to your household electrical service; no, Volt won't leave you stranded when the battery pack is drained; no, Volt's gasoline is not connected to the drivetrain.
Volt was designed for the real world and is the first electric vehicle (EV) that isn't a glorified golf cart with limited range. That's because Volt has a 1.4-litre gasoline engine to power the generator when the lithium-ion battery pack is depleted.
That generator supplies power to the front wheels through what Chev calls the Voltec drive system - twin electric motors and a continuously variable transmission. And the switch from pure electric to gasoline-generated power is seamless.
Chevrolet claims Volt will run on battery power for up to 80 km, but that depends on a lot of things, such as vehicle speed and how many of the car's electrical accessories are operating.
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Volt electrifies electric vehicle market The electro-hydraulic powertrain generates up to 150 hp and a ton of instantly available torque - 273 lb.-ft. Because it's so quiet you may find yourself going much quicker than your senses tell you. In tests by the Automobile Journalists Association ... |