UNIQUE CAR SEAT COVERS - SEAT COVERS

Unique Car Seat Covers - Evenflo Strollers And Car Seats

Unique Car Seat Covers


unique car seat covers
    seat covers
  • (Seat cover) Sometimes used to describe drivers or passengers of four-wheelers.
  • (Seat Cover) The vinyl material that covers the part of the bike you sit on.
  • (Seat cover) attractive female in passenger seat, usually in a 4 wheeler
    unique
  • alone(p): radically distinctive and without equal; "he is alone in the field of microbiology"; "this theory is altogether alone in its penetration of the problem"; "Bach was unique in his handling of counterpoint"; "craftsmen whose skill is unequaled"; "unparalleled athletic ability"; "a
  • unique(p): (followed by `to') applying exclusively to a given category or condition or locality; "a species unique to Australia"
  • A unique person or thing
  • singular: the single one of its kind; "a singular example"; "the unique existing example of Donne's handwriting"; "a unique copy of an ancient manuscript"; "certain types of problems have unique solutions"
    car
  • A vehicle that runs on rails, esp. a railroad car
  • A railroad car of a specified kind
  • the compartment that is suspended from an airship and that carries personnel and the cargo and the power plant
  • A road vehicle, typically with four wheels, powered by an internal combustion engine and able to carry a small number of people
  • a wheeled vehicle adapted to the rails of railroad; "three cars had jumped the rails"
  • a motor vehicle with four wheels; usually propelled by an internal combustion engine; "he needs a car to get to work"

1962 Cooper Climax Type 59 Single Seat Racecar
1962 Cooper Climax Type 59 Single Seat Racecar
This T59 was originally built for one of the successful lady racing drivers of all times - Patsy Burt. Estimate ?80,000 to ?100,000 Bids to ?60,000 - "not sold" The father of the modern single-seater racing car was born in Surbiton, England in 1946, though it's doubtful if anybody at the time realised the full significance of the tiny 500 cc motorcycle-engined contraption created by Charles and John Cooper. While there had been rear-engined racers before (not least the mighty Grand Prix Auto Unions), nearly all designs of the time still owed their configuration to the horse and cart. Moreover, not only did the father and son start the rear-engined revolution, they did more than anybody to progress it - carrying the basic concept from the 500cc F3 category right through to F1; winning the World Championships of 1959 and 1960 along the way. The same common sense engineering served them well in Formula Junior. Three models, each building on the success of the previous one, were introduced between 1960 and 1962. The T52 of 1960 employed the 15-inch wheels and drum brakes of the F3 cars, while the curved tube chassis was more akin to the F2 machines; as were the transverse rear spring and magnesium uprights. The front suspension featured coil springs and double wishbones. The quick release body was fashioned in aluminium. Henry Taylor won that year's prestigious Monaco Formula Junior race in a T52. The T56 of 1961 was closer to Cooper's F1 car of the time, with its straight tube chassis clothed in a glassfibre body with distinctive high tail fin. Suspension was now by wishbones all round and the wheels had been reduced from 15-inches to 13-inches in diameter. The driver's seat was now more reclined. It was a good year for the model, with many victories falling to the Works pairing of Tony Maggs and John Love, and the Midland Racing Partnership running T56s for a range of competent drivers. The T59 of 1962 demonstrated Cooper's increasing commitment to the formula, with far more of the components being of bespoke origin. The much improved chassis was narrower and stiffer, the wishbones were longer and the body reduced in both width and height. Braking was now by discs all round, using callipers from the Mini-Cooper. Maggs and Love were again successful for the Works and no less than 28 examples were made for export. The T59 on offer is a unique example built especially for one of the most successful lady racing drivers of all time - Patsy Burt. In 1968, she became the first woman to win the Brighton Speed trials. Two years later she was victorious in the RAC National Sprint Championship driving a McLaren-Oldsmobile. She held the ladies' record at Shelsley Walsh from 1967 to 1978 and, between 1953 and 1970, achieved: 43 outright wins, 13 course records and no less than 172 class awards. Her successes came behind the wheels of a variety of cars, the key ones of which were immaculately turned out by her engineer and long-time partner Ron Smith and finished in what affectionately became known as 'Burt Blue'. Chassis CPMB163 was one of these and, from the outset, lengthened at the back to take a Coventry Climax DOHC FPF engine. According to the car's FIA paperwork, this work was carried out at the garage of renowned F1 privateer Rob Walker. The same paperwork records Patsy's first outing with the car being Firle hillclimb on 26/5/1963, where she achieved FTD, something she also did at: Brunton, 19/9/63 and 13/9/64; Wiscombe Park, 9/4/64; Stapleford, 4/10/64 and once more at Firle, 30/4/65. She won first class awards at Church Lawford, Wiscombe Park (twice), Loton Park (twice) and Long Harston, while the best result from her 11 RAC Hillclimb Championship Events in this car was her 4th overall at Great Auclum on 8/8/64 - no mean feat in a modified Formula Junior car. It would appear that at some stage after Patsy started campaigning the McLaren-Oldsmobile, the T59 passed to Cooper collector Rodney Tolhurst, who reputedly fitted it with a BMC four-cylinder engine so Josey Tolhurst could go Formula Junior racing. Another Cooper exponent, Allan Miles, seems to have been the next owner, and is believed to have been responsible for re-fitting the original-style Coventry Climax engine - certainly it is currently powered by an FPF unit coupled to a Hewland box. The car is also reputed to have twice belonged to the historic racer and restorer John Harper. We understand the car was extensively restored by Peter Denty in 1979, since when it has been raced in Europe, South Africa and the USA. The vendor purchased the single-seater from Anthony Bailey and informs us that it has been running in HGPCA events (class 10, pre-1966 1.5 litre four-cylinder F1 cars) for quite some time now. He assures us it is a podium finisher in the right hands and tells us the Cooper is being sold with Patsy's original seat cover and steering wheel. Describing the suspension and brakes as "functioning very well indeed",
Infant carrier cover
Infant carrier cover
A unique design that keeps your baby snug and dry in any infant car seat.

unique car seat covers
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