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MV Lochinvar (Scottish Gaelic: Loch a' Bharr) is a pioneering diesel electric hybrid ferry built for Caledonian MacBrayne. Initially, she operated between Tarbert and Portavadie , was moved to the Mallaig to Armadale route in 2016 and currently operates on the Lochaline to Fishnish route.
HMS Lochinvar (shore establishment) was a minesweeper training base at Port Edgar, commissioned in 1939. It became an active minesweeper base in 1941, and moved to Granton in 1943. It was paid off in 1948 but immediately recommissioned as a minesweeping trials establishment, becoming an independent command in 1951.
2007 Toyota Yaris hatchback owner's manual 1919 Ford Motor Company car and truck operating manual. An owner's manual (also called an instruction manual or a user guide) is an instructional book or booklet that is supplied with almost all technologically advanced consumer products such as vehicles, home appliances and computer peripherals.
Lochinvar Corporation, producer of water heaters; Water transport; HMS Lochinvar, name shared in turn by one ship and two shore establishments of the Royal Navy; MV Lochinvar, ferry operated by Caledonian MacBrayne; Lochinvar, fictional characters: In Walter Scott's poem, Marmion; Walter Gordon, laird of Lochinvar in S.R.Crockett's 1897 novel ...
Lochinvar (or Lan Var) is a loch in the civil parish of Dalry in the historic county of Kirkcudbrightshire, Dumfries and Galloway Scotland. It is located in the Galloway Hills, around 3.5 miles (5.6 km) north-east of St. John's Town of Dalry. The loch formerly had an island on which stood Lochinvar Castle, seat of the Gordon family.
The Lochinvar National Park lies south west of Lusaka in Zambia, on the south side of the Kafue River. A Map of Lochinvar National Park The habitats the national park protects are a large portion of the southern Kafue Flats floodplain, including the Chunga Lagoon, and drier woodland dominated by termite mounds.
Lochinver (Loch an Inbhir in Gaelic) is a village at the head of the sea loch Loch Inver, on the coast in the Assynt district of Sutherland, Highland, Scotland. [2] A few miles north-east is Loch Assynt which is the source of the River Inver which flows into Loch Inver at the village.