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- Newsgroups: rec.autos
- Path: sparky!uunet!charon.amdahl.com!pacbell.com!att-out!cbnewsh!shun
- From: shun@cbnewsh.cb.att.com (shun.cheung)
- Subject: Re: HOW TO AVOID HITTING THE WALL IN GARAGE
- Organization: AT&T
- Distribution: na
- Date: Thu, 19 Nov 1992 17:09:21 GMT
- Message-ID: <1992Nov19.170921.28139@cbnewsh.cb.att.com>
- References: <1992Nov19.020843.4524@attila.weitek.COM> <1992Nov19.092443.11468@scott.skidmore.edu>
- Lines: 23
-
- In article <1992Nov19.092443.11468@scott.skidmore.edu> jreiser@scott.skidmore.edu (Jason Reiser... Asleep) writes:
- >ehsan@attila.weitek.COM (Ehsan Kalami) writes:
- >>
- >> hi, I am sure a lot of people have a similar problem. Where can one buy
- >> blocks of cement/concrete so that we know how far to drive a car into
- >> garage. similar to one found in parking lots?
-
- Well, you can simply remove the wall. :-)
-
- >I don't know where to get the real McCoy, but for something that's
- >probably a lot less expensive, consider a "Park Block". It's a
- >plastic/rubber block that you stick to the garage floor and it stops
- >the car as you roll in. Available from Mid America Designs (Corvette
- >place) for only $12.95 at 800-637-5533.
-
- Seriously, that's what we have been using at home for several years now
- and we like it. You won't end up with something hanging from the ceiling.
- The only problem is that our "park block" is just laid on the ground
- and it gets pushed by the car once in a while so that we need to adjust
- its position occasionally.
- --
- -- Shun Cheung, electronic: shun.cheung@att.com voice: (908) 615-5135
- HR 1A-304, AT&T Bell Labs, 480 Red Hill Road, Middletown, NJ, 07748 USA
-