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One thing to keep in mind is that the best street cars don’t necessarily make the best endurance race cars when they are 10 or 20 years older than new. And sometimes lousy cars really can hold together well in that scenario. That being said, older BMWs and Miatas are safe, if uninteresting choices. Be mindful of

I know a guy with a 308.  I tell him to get one of these to use as a stunt double.

As one who owns an Elise, I cannot at all fathom this type of car without a manual.  0% interest in the 4C or this car for that reason.  If you want to make it about the experience and not the numbers, then give me the manual.

It seems like the normal cycle.  Manufacturers make the yellow cars.  Nobody buys the yellow cars.  Yellow cars are discontinued.  People complain there are no yellow cars, so manufacturers make the yellow cars... and so it goes...

From a technical standpoint, I think Ford’s decision to put the blind spot detection in the tail light makes sense. It is probably more protected than most other areas in the back of the truck, probably installs with the tail light in a single manufacturing step (cheaper/easier to build) and likely easier to repair if

I had an ‘89 Grand Am with this engine. That car ranks as one of the worse cars ever created by humanity. It broke all the time and never failed to do it suddenly, and to leave me stranded. But later it got really bad. After it broke and left me stranded six times out of the last ten that I drove it (with unrelated

And you know what?  Convertibles sold waaay better when they were worse.

The correct answer.

That’s fine.  No need to see them on the road.  I saw one once, coming towards me.  I thought “ooh a supercar” and cracked my window to hear it go by...  and it did... in EV mode... silently.  I put up the window and thought “I hate the future”

Go to one of those ‘you-wash-it’ places with the pressure washer. Bring your own detergent, bucket, and sponge. Also, a small towel.  Old clothes helps. Use the sprayer there to wet the car, spray underneath the car, and fill your bucket. Wash it quickly, dump the bucket and rinse the car. You should be able to wash

Even if the spyder remains, I never really understood the the point of making a super lightweight ‘driver focused’ car exclusively with a two-pedal gearbox.  Can’t really say that I’ll miss it.

They aren’t depreciating because they are worth every penny. The engine is in the right place, the weight is in the right place, and the power is good enough to have fun. Everything else feels like driving a bus.

My parents had a 428 CJ Cyclone, which they traded in on an awful lime gold vinyl top ‘73 Torino that they then kept for ~20 years, or you know, about until I was old enough to drive.

The better thing to do is to start with a lightweight car and add power.  

This sort of thing would happen all the time if traffic circles were more prevalent in the USA.

Despite the design praise, the LH cars were often unable to cover a distance of 300m without need of mechanical repairs.

They are outstanding for that sort of thing, so it’s not without reason.

I’ve been grayed for like 7 years now.  Never did figure out how to permanently get out of it. 

I still look in the windows of cars where there might be a possibility of manual transmission coolness. Especially in regular cars. It’s a rare occasion anymore, but occasionally, I’m delighted with an honest to goodness manual. Still, the ones I still like best are the cars that were (or are) *only* available with

What’s crazy is that it works out to an average of 185,185 Mustangs PER YEAR.  Over a 54 year period.  Nuts.