Battles
Battles
Battles

Is this basically the Youtube version of Long Way Up (since that one they did on Harley electric bikes). I really enjoyed that series, so consider me interested (I’ll check this out when I’m washing dishes, aka my Youtube time).

It was an utterly fantastic episode; you should slap it up on its own Adventurelopnik post. 

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I watched that video on Saturday, it was SOOOO good.

I read the title of the article and thought it was Zach and Ari on their 1000 mile ride through Alaska, and the Zero’s were the Honda Trails they rode.

There is a Die Hard wiki?  Who, seriously, has the time to write the internet

They also claim that M8s can be legally registered to drive on the roads in California

Don’t see one “U wot M8?” meme on here so...

The “wireless charger” still has the 85% efficient AD/DC adapter to convert mains voltage to DC.

Wireless efficiency drops by the square of distance, so unless you’re driving over a raised “rail” that has sensors to adjust in real time to the height of your vehicle, yes wireless charging is very inefficient.

You think MTS had any interest in being there, beyond getting paid to be there?

1000% disagree.

That is a MASSIVE waste of electricity. Extremely inefficient.

“AdBlue is a diesel exhaust fluid that dissolves”

What you have to wonder is what did this beast cost to build? The seller isn’t going to get that back, but I’d still like to see him/her get a decent price for such a decent effort.

I think the price is kind of strong but damn, look at it. He built a functional, single-handle tailgate, even.

The entire incident happened only because officers chased him. 

I always wondered what happened to “you can’t outrun a Motorola

If they police had broken off pursuit immediately, it’s highly likely this suspect would have still caused deaths of others.

Cops will always insist they need AR15's to counter pocketknives and .38 revolvers, and that these crashes prove they should have nothing less than the new monster Hummers.

  • Some high credit scorers get high-priced loans. While, on average, borrowers with low credit scores are offered the worst terms, about 21,000 borrowers with prime and super-prime credit scores, about 3 percent of the total borrowers in that group, received loans with APRs of 10 percent or greater—more than double the