Car Battery Replacement Malahide

Professional On Time Car Battery Replacement in Malahide

Breakdown on the side of the road or the need for a car battery replacement or involved in an accident in this area can be a stressful experience, and also one of the most frustrating situations that motorists can encounter within Malahide area, calling us means a safe and reliable motors recovery.

24 Hour 7 Days A Week Car Battery Replacement in Malahide

Emergency Car Battery Replacement In Malahide

Malahide Fast Recovery can help you with vehicle breakdown, motor accident, auto lockout, home start and more. If you need a vehicle recovery or roadside assistance in Malahide our teams can take care of your problems.

We are here in Malahide, we have wheel lift tow trucks and flat bed trucks. We can provide high quality car battery replacement services in Malahide, {county} area ranging from car transportation, vehicle breakdown recovery services and roadside assistance. We are fully insured, certified and bonded.

professional Car Battery Replacement in Malahide

24/7 Car Battery Replacement in Malahide

Emergency car battery replacement in Malahide:

24 hour Motor Emergency Battery Jump Start Service in Malahide.

We can jump start Car, Bike, Machinery Plant and commercial vehicle requiring 12 – 24 volt battery. Whether you are at home or on the road and your battery failed, call Fast Recovery team.

Do not let an inexperienced person jump start the battery of your car. If you or a friend tries to do a car jump start, there is a very high possibility that it can cause some injury. This is because the car batteries is highly inflammable and even a small spark can cause a serious fire. Our professionals make sure that proper care is taken to ensure that before your car jump start procedure is started the likelihood of your car battery exploding is eliminated. If the jump start does not work for your vehicle, we then offer you vehicle recovery to a destination of your choice.

Motorcycle Car Battery Replacement Services in Malahide

Fast Recovery provides car battery replacement Services for Car, Van, Caravan and Motorcycle in Malahide. We can also recover almost every vehicle up to 3.5t without key including LWB, High Top and Luton Van. Here at Fast Recovery we offer safe scooter and motorcycle recovery in Malahide ranging from 50cc to 1400cc and as well as custom made tricycle recovery in Malahide. Our recovery team are available to assist customers for car battery replacement in Malahide area, we can jump start car and also truck and bus requiring 24 volt battery.
We provide fast response time and speedy solutions to your vehicle problems in the most effective and convenient way possible, we offer an accident, breakdown, recovery service from a simple jumpstart or wheel changing service just to get you moving again to full total lift transportation towing service. No matter what your vehicle needs are, you can count on us to be there.

Malahide expert Car Battery Replacement services

Free Scrap Car Removal in Malahide

Quick and reliable free Scrap Vehicle Removal in Malahide area.

Considering recycling your old car, van, or 4×4, all you need to do is call FAST Recovery team and we’ll take care of all the requirement so there’s nothing for you to worry about.

Malahide ( MAL-ə-hyde; Irish: Mullach Íde, meaning ‘possibly “the hill of Íde”‘) is an affluent coastal settlement in Fingal, County Dublin, Ireland, situated 14 kilometres (9 mi) north of Dublin city. It has a village centre surrounded by suburban housing estates, with a population of over 17,000.

Malahide Castle dates from the 12th century and is surrounded by a large park, part of which incorporates an international cricket ground. The area also features a sandy beach, a marina, and a variety of sporting clubs.

The modern name Malahide comes from “Mullach Íde”, possibly meaning “the hill of Íde” or “Íde’s sand-hill”; it could also mean “Sand-hills of the Hydes” (from Mullac h-Íde), in turn probably referring to a Norman family from the Donabate area. According to the Placenames Database of Ireland the name Malahide is possibly derived from the Irish “Baile Átha Thíd” meaning “the town of the ford of Thíd”, which may have been a ford at the mouth of the Gaybrook Stream, on the road to Swords. Malahide Bay was anciently called Inber Domnann, the “river-mouth of the Fir Domnann”.

Malahide is situated 14 kilometres (9 mi) north of the city of Dublin, lying between Swords, Kinsealy and Portmarnock. It is situated on the southern shore of an estuary where the Broadmeadow River comes to the sea; on the opposite side of the estuary is Kilcrea, and, some way inland, Donabate. To the west of the village, the Gay Brook or Gaybrook Stream passes through Yellow Walls, once a small separate village, to reach the estuary in a marshy area.

The village is served by the DART and some mainline rail services, run by Irish Rail. The Dublin Bus 32, 42 and 102, the 32X and 142 peak hour express services, and the 42N Nite-Link route serve the town from Dublin City Centre. Route 102 serves local areas to/from Dublin Airport (via Swords) and Sutton Station (via Portmarnock).

Malahide is close to the M1 motorway. To travel to Malahide by car, one would exit the M1 at Junction 4, travel along the R132 Swords Bypass, and then finally onto the R106 and into Malahide.

While there are some remnants of prehistoric activity, Malahide is known to have become a persistent settlement from the coming of the Vikings, who landed in 795 and used Malahide Estuary (along with Baldoyle Bay, where they had a longphort) as a convenient base. With the arrival of the Anglo-Normans, the last Danish King of Dublin retired to the area in 1170.

Malahide Castle, which dominates the area, was constructed after Henry II granted an extensive area of land north of Dublin to Sir Richard Talbot in 1176. The castle evolved from this, and remained in the hands of the Talbot family until 1976, aside from a short period where it was seized by Oliver Cromwell.

There is an ancient covered well, St. Sylvester’s, on the old main street (Old Street, previously Chapel Street), which used to have a “pattern” to Our Lady each 15 August.

In 1475 Thomas Talbot, head of the Talbot family of Malahide Castle, was granted the title Admiral of the port of Malahide by King Edward IV, with power to hold admiralty courts and levy customs duties on all merchandise coming into the port. The office was hereditary, and the family’s right to act as Admiral was confirmed by the Court of Exchequer (Ireland) in 1639.

By the early 19th century, the village had a population of over 1000, and a number of local industries, including salt harvesting, while the harbour continued in commercial operation, with landings of coal and construction materials. By 1831, the population had reached 1223. The area grew in popularity in Georgian times as a seaside resort for wealthy Dublin city dwellers. This is still evident today from the fine collection of Georgian houses in the town and along the seafront, and Malahide is still a popular spot for day-trippers, especially in the summer months.

In the 1960s, developers began to build housing estates around the village core of Malahide, launching the first, Ard na Mara, in 1964. Further estates followed, to the northwest, south and west, but the village core remained intact, with the addition of a “marina apartment complex” development, adjacent to the coastal village green.

There are many shops and service outlets in the village core, including a small shopping centre, a supermarket, fashion boutiques, hair and beauty salons, florists, art galleries, book shops, food outlets, and a service station. There are multiple pubs (including Gibney’s, Fowler’s, Duffy’s and Gilbert and Wright’s), cafés and restaurants, and there is also the historic 203-room Grand Hotel. Malahide has the highest median household income of any large census town in Ireland, according to the Central Statistics Office (CSO).

Malahide is part of the Dáil Éireann constituency of Dublin Fingal, whose five representatives, elected in 2020, are Louise O’Reilly (Sinn Féin), Joe O’Brien (Green Party), Duncan Smith (Labour), Darragh O’Brien (Fianna Fáil), and Alan Farrell (Fine Gael).

Malahide forms part of the Howth–Malahide local electoral area (LEA) of Fingal County Council. The current representatives of the eight-seat constituency are Joan Hopkins (Social Democrats); Eoghan O’Brien (Fianna Fáil); Daire Ní Laoi (Sinn Féin); Jimmy Guerin (Independent); Anthony Lavin (Fine Gael); Brian McDonagh (Labour); David Healy (Green Party); and Keith Redmond (Independent). Hopkins was co-opted to fill the seat vacated by Cian O’Callaghan upon his election to Dáil Éireann in the neighbouring constituency of Dublin Bay North.

Malahide is also a civil parish in the ancient barony of Coolock within the historic County Dublin.

Near to the village itself is a regional park formed from Malahide Castle and its demesne, including gardens. This was once the estate of the Baron Talbot of Malahide family. Aside from Malahide Castle Demesne, there are a number of smaller parks (with further spaces planned, for example, at Robswall and Seamount). There are several golf courses nearby, and GAA, soccer, tennis, rugby, yacht clubs and Sea Scouts. Malahide also has a substantial marina.

The Malahide area has more than twenty residents’ associations, sixteen of which, as of May 2007, worked together through the Malahide Community Forum, which publishes a quarterly newsletter, The Malahide Guardian.

There is a Lions club, a camera club, a musical and drama society, the Enchiriadis choirs, a chess club and a photography group which has published calendars. The Malahide Pipe Band was established in 1954 and still practices in the same area, in Yellow Walls, today. The band comprises pipers and drummers playing the bagpipes and snare, tenor and bass drums, and plays at various events locally, and in competitions around the country in the summer months. The band has also been involved in running a Pipe Band Competition on the grounds of Malahide Castle for a number of years.

In 1990, Malahide won the Irish Tidy Towns Competition.

Malahide Historical Society collects materials of local and general historical interest, arranges talks, and operates a museum on the grounds of Malahide Castle. The museum first opened in the cottage at the main vehicular entrance to Malahide Demesne, in 1988. It moved to the Craft Courtyard in 2007 but closed in 2012, with the collection being stored. It reopened in a new format in some rooms in the Steward’s House, by the coach parking, and offers free access.

Malahide Sea Scouts (9th Port of Dublin) was founded in 1919 and has 635 members making it the largest Scout Group in Ireland and largest Scout Group in Europe. Malahide Sea Scouts offers a Sea Scouting programme to boys and girls of 6 to 26 years of age from the Scout Den on James’s Terrace, and Sea Scouts can be seen sailing, rowing, paddling, swimming and powerboating. It has had several notable members including; Adam Clayton, Dave Evans (Edge), Richard (Dik) Evans, John Kilraine, Mark Little, Philip Quinn, Richard Burrows, Scott Flanigan, Eamon Falvey, Karl Deeter, Kevin Dundon, Philip Walton. In 2019, Malahide Sea Scouts celebrated its centenary.

There are also a wide variety of sports clubs within the Malahide area. Rugby, soccer, GAA sports, sailing, hockey, golf, cricket, tennis and basketball are all well represented.

Malahide Rugby Club is located in a modern clubhouse and sports ground opposite the scenic Malahide estuary on Estuary Road. Founded in 1922, Malahide Rugby Club had to disband during World War II due to a lack of available players. However, in 1978 the club was reformed. It now fields three senior men’s teams, one women’s team, four youth teams and six “mini” rugby teams.

Malahide United AFC was founded in 1944 and currently fields 60 schoolboy/girl teams, from Under 7 to Under 18, and 4 senior teams. They have an Academy catering for 5-, 6- and 7-year-olds. With over 1,000 registered players, Malahide United is one of the largest clubs in Ireland. The home ground is Gannon Park, which comprises two 11-a-side pitches, one 7-a-side pitch, one 11-a-side floodlit all-weather pitch, one floodlit 5-a-side/warm-up all-weather pitch and full clubhouse facilities. Further pitches are used in Malahide Castle (two 7/9-a-sides and three 11-a-sides) with a further 11-a-side pitch in Broomfield, Malahide.

Aston Village FC was established in 1994. Their current home ground is by Malahide Castle, and a local company is their main sponsor. They have three senior teams, competing in both the U.C.F.L and the A.U.L leagues. Although small in size they still cater for up to 100 senior players with ages ranging from 16 – 43 years of age.

Atlético Malahide was established in 2015 by a group of younger players. Their current home pitch is on Malahide Castle grounds. Atletico’s team consists of young men aged 19–25. In 2019 the team won their first silverware and following several promotions currently plays in the UCFL Division 1.

There are two tennis clubs in the area: Malahide Lawn Tennis & Croquet Club, founded in 1879, is one of the oldest tennis clubs in Ireland. The club is situated in the centre of Malahide village, overlooking the outer Broadmeadow estuary. Grove Lawn Tennis Club is a grass court tennis club.

St Sylvesters is the local Gaelic Athletic Association club.

Malahide Golf Club opened in 1892, moving to a new location in 1990. It has a 2-storey clubhouse completed in May 1990, with 1,000 square metres, including bars, a restaurant, a conference room and a snooker room. The 17th is a notoriously difficult hole known to locals as “Cromwell’s Delight”, due to its narrow fairways and dominant bunkers.

There are two sailing clubs situated on the estuary; Swords Sailing & Boating Club and Malahide Yacht Club. The inner, Broadmeadow (Bromwell) estuary is also the home of Fingal Sailing School and DMG Sailsports based in the 350-berth marina.

Malahide Fingal Hockey Club was formed from the amalgamation of Malahide Hockey Club and Fingal Hockey Club (formerly Aer Lingus). An all-female club, they currently field four senior teams and have a junior section of nine teams aged between 7 and 16. All teams for play and train in Broomfield Malahide.

Malahide Cricket Club was founded in 1861 and the ground is situated within Malahide Castle demesne, near the railway station. The ground has hosted Test cricket and One Day Internationals.

Malahide Basketball Club was formed in 1977, and as of 2017, fields 2 senior ladies’ teams, 2 senior men’s teams and 15 junior girls and boys teams (from under 10 to under 18). They train and play their home matches at Malahide Community School and Holywell Community Centre.

There are five schools in the environs of Malahide, four primaries (Pope John Paul II National School, St. Andrews National School, St. Oliver Plunkett Primary School, and St. Sylvester’s Infant School) and one secondary (Pobal Scoil Iosa, Malahide).

Malahide has two Catholic parishes, St. Sylvester’s and Yellow Walls, and one Church of Ireland parish (St. Andrews), and also forms part of a Presbyterian community, with a church built in 1956 as the first Presbyterian church in the Republic of Ireland since 1922 (it is one of two churches of the Congregation of Howth and Malahide).

Malahide railway station opened on 25 May 1844. It is now one of the northern termini of the DART system, (the other being Howth). The station features a heritage garden and a decorative ironwork canopy, which contains the monogram of the Great Northern Railway (‘GNR’), who operated the route prior to the nationalisation of the railways.

The railway crosses the Broadmeadow estuary on the Broadmeadow viaduct, known locally as The Arches. The original viaduct was a wooden structure built in 1844, which was replaced with an iron structure in 1860 and a pre-cast structure in 1966-7.

On 21 August 2009, the 18:07 train from Balbriggan to Connolly was passing over the 200-year-old viaduct when the driver noticed subsidence and the embankment giving way on the northbound track. The train passed over the bridge before it collapsed and the driver alerted authorities. An inquiry was to investigate the possibility that seabed erosion was the primary cause of the collapse.
A member of Malahide Sea Scouts, Ivan Barrett, had contacted Iarnród Éireann five days before the collapse about possible damage to the viaduct and a change in water flow around it.

Dublin Bus provides bus services in the area on routes H2, 32X, 42, 42N, 102 and 142:

Former and current residents include:

People born and/or raised in Malahide include:

Towing Safety Absolutely Critical

Let’s face it, there’s an excellent reason why there are so many SUV’s and pick-up trucks out there when driving today– primarily, we are towing more than ever. Proprietors of jet-skis, bikes, pull-behind Recreational Vehicle’s, watercrafts– you call it– they all need to tow every so often. While towing is a reasonably easy procedure, security has to be used or it can end up being unsafe or even lethal to various other motorists when traveling.

The proper use security chains is one method to guarantee that the tow vehicle never gets separated from the trailer. Obviously, security chains are required by law so utilizing them not only maintains every person risk-free, it additionally keeps you legal.

When utilizing security chains throughout towing, it is vital that the chains go across under the tongue of the trailer. If for any kind of reason the trailer were to end up being removed from the drawback, those chains will stop the trailer from dropping to the ground and away from the tow vehicle.

While towing, it is very important for the vehicles behind you to understand when you are stopping, turning, or utilizing your fronts lights. It is required by law that any type of trailer have brake lights, turn signals, and tail lights that operate in unison with the lights on the tow vehicle. The individuals behind you might obtain overwhelmed or not be conscious that you are stopping or turning and an accident is most likely if they don’t. Unique electrical wiring harnesses are typically supplied with a trailer that should hook into the circuitry of the tow vehicle. They may be bought separately at the majority of automobile parts stores if your trailer does not have such an electrical wiring harness.

You also never ever want to be towing anything that goes beyond the optimum tow ability of your vehicle. The initial is that you will certainly damage your vehicle’s drive train when towing trailers beyond the towing ability.

Lastly, make sure that whatever you occur to be towing is protected properly. Changing loads can trigger extreme handling problems while towing. And in the worst situation situation, an unsecured lots could merely fall off and create you genuine headaches while jeopardizing motorists.

By following the easy safety and security pointers provided above, you ought to safely carry freight from factor A to point B without incident. Towing is a fairly simple procedure however it need to just be done when safety and security is made priority one.

If for any factor the trailer were to come to be detached from the drawback, those chains will certainly stop the trailer from falling to the ground and away from the tow vehicle. It is called for by legislation that any kind of trailer have brake lights, turn signals, and tail lights that work in unison with the lights on the tow vehicle. You also never want to be towing anything that exceeds the maximum tow capacity of your vehicle. The very first is that you will damage your vehicle’s drive train when towing trailers beyond the towing capability.

 

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