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This cup holder is designed for 3.4" to 3.8" diameter bottles and cups, featuring an adjustable base and rubber tabs to keep your bottle secure. Adjusting the base is straightforward, simply turn ...
If you have travel mugs from several brands, this car cup holder adapter is worth a look. It’s short and wide and includes multiple handle cutouts so that the mug can be set down at a variety of ...
Need to use your laptop in your car? Don't purchase a pricey laptop stand for the passenger seat or shell out for a dashboard mount. With some creative DIY-action you can turn your cup holder into ...
Meet the U-Grip Cup Holder Car Mount. After dropping your phone between the seat in your car and your center console more than once, you realize you desperately need a car mount.
Setup is a breeze: Just select one of the few sizes of included cup bases, slip it into the cup holder, and slot your phone into the adjustable groove on top. The mount can hold phones and cases ...
The cup holder, in its modern automotive incarnation, is about 30 years old. It achieved industrial-design celebrity status in the 1980s, and it's been proliferating ever since.
Bugatti's W-16 hypercars may be capable of 282 mph with the roof down, but they do not come with cup holders. That was a problem for one Chiron owner, who apparently spilled a drink in her car's ...
The "snack tray for car." (Credit: Modern Mechanix) Real demand for the cup holder didn't pick up until the 1950s, when drive-ins and drive-thru windows became mainstays of American eating.
The first true cup holders were primitive and garish and non-integral to the car’s design. Mostly, they were plastic holsterlike devices that hooked on to the inside of the door, staying in ...
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