Bret
Bret
Bret

The Se7en in that pic is the newish 3-cyl bargain model, right? I just watched the TG where May just raved about it and it’s cheap pizza-cutting tires.

It amazing what new heads and a better carburetor can do to wake up malaise era engines.

Awesome. I grew up in thrall of 60s & 70s American cars. They were gloriously ostentatious and a statement of intent rather than a celebration of achievement. Probably the greatest era in American car aesthetics, if not dynamic capability.

And at 1.5 PSI and he’d be using the median as a traction medium.

Glad to see the GM understeer club is still alive and well. I present my own contribution. BEHOLD:

Please drive used Cayenne prices down.

I really enjoyed this review, Patrick. I was in my older Cayman a couple of days ago and spotted a red 4C in a parking lot, so I stopped to take some comparison pics. It’s a lot smaller than most expect it to be. And that bloody Red! I think it’s super cool...

Rolling Coal. Die brodozer scum

In communist russia the pole positions you

As someone who did Indy to Golden Colorado in a solar car. I salute you!

The picture shows a second gen, but the first gen’s looks the same. I made mine better:

I am not sure if you are serious, if are you don’t live in California. Middle class income in San Jose is $103K vs $64K median in the US (http://goo.gl/ggj9Zi)


. At $103K you won’t be buying a home in San Jose, unless your wife makes roughly the same amount, but it will allow you to commute in from one of the cheaper

Miss them all. Murilee, Wes Siler, Ray Wert .... all of them.

Instead of thinking of them as pot holes think of them as slalom holes. Now go buy that Atom!

this was probably one of our infamous winter sunny days, judging by the sun’s angle. It was probably in the high 20s .

Miata driver in Seattle here. It’s amazing owning this car here. I got it thinking it would be the most impractical car ever (rain, traffic, stop and go, hills, etc.) but it’s so spectacularly beautiful here and it rains less than you’d think, especially this past winter. More gray, sometimes rainy. Mostly beautiful,

There’s a breed of people born to love this city. Hats off to you. (Though I’d want to REALLY crank that heat if some of my spring road trips in a Del Sol many years ago are any indication).

Roads are generally solid here - none of the crazy heat and not a lot of the ugly freeze-thaw cycles that play havoc with road surfaces. The rain is generally moderate to light. And when the sun does come out, there isn’t a better place in the world to be.

And yet somehow *I* was the mediawhore/distraction.