Published:
10:29 AM January 27, 2021
Tools were stolen from a VW transporter van, which was parked on Spashett Road in Lowestoft. Picture: Google Images
- Credit: Google Images
Thieves stole a quantity of tools after a Volkswagen Transporter van was broken into.
Police are seeking witnesses and are appealing for information after the VW van, which was parked on Spashett Road in Lowestoft, was targeted.
Inquiries are under way in connection with the theft from a vehicle incident, which happened between 5pm on Friday, January 22 and 9am on Tuesday, January 26.
A police spokesman said: A quantity of tools were stolen from within, including a drill, saw, nail gun chisel and a tool box.
Jeep Grand Cherokee, Alfa Romeo Stelvio, Citroen C5 Aircross and the other important models crucial to Stellantis future
The world got a new automotive juggernaut this week.
It took more than a year but, the merger between FiatChrysler Automobiles (FCA) and Group PSA (Peugeot-Citroen) was finally completed, immediately making it the fourth largest car company in the world.
Together the combined output of Stellantis is approximately eight million vehicles annually and, by combining forces, the two sides hope to save up to €5 billion ($7.8 billion).
Stellantis encompasses a massive 14 brands – Alfa Romeo, Fiat, Abarth, Maserati, Lancia, Jeep, Ram, Dodge, Chrysler, Peugeot, Citroen, DS, Opel and Vauxhall. While obviously not all of those are sold in Australia, there could be major changes for the brands that are offered here.
By Vicky Nash Audience and Content Editor
Kustom Vans - which transforms camper vans and motor homes - will be appearing on Discovery Channel s Goblin Works Garage Pictures: Kustom Vans A CREATIVE petrol head who transforms camper vans and motor homes for customers across the world has been chosen to showcase his show-stopping design skills on TV. Self-taught Ricky Good launched Kustom Vans in 2013 to create unique motors for adventurous road users – and his customisations have caught the eye of TV producers. The father-of-two from Portland had been working as a press assistant at the Dorset Echo in 2012 when he purchased a VW camper van in need of TLC.
Updated
Tuesday, 22nd December 2020, 2:02 pm
A lack of modern safety equipment on new vans is putting the lives of their drivers and other road users at risk, according to new tests.
As vans take to our roads in ever increasing numbers, a new safety assessment has identified a huge gap in active safety systems that leaves vans lagging well behind passenger cars.
Vans are involved in more fatal accidents per mile travelled than any other type of vehicle on the UK’s roads. Car occupants are 40 per cent more likely to be killed or seriously injured when involved in a head-on incident with a van compared to another car and in the five years up to 2018, collisions involving vans were responsible for a 14 per cent increase in the number of serious injuries to pedestrians, car occupants, and van occupants. Cyclist casualties also rose by 22 per cent.