Cliff8928
Cliff8928
Cliff8928

The harbor freight version of this is great, especially when it's on sale. I have the 1.5 ton version which is plenty for anything I'm going to use it for.

The harbor freight version of this is great, especially when it's on sale. I have the 1.5 ton version which is

Something isn't filled out right. A form doesn't have the proper number on it. The DMV asks for the original customs release, rather than a copy. The clerk doesn't believe the mileage on the car, or gets into a fight with you about why an odometer reading "58,246" is actually just over 36,000 miles. There's always

Active Trace Control (I'm not exactly sure what this does, maybe it helps you trace things?)

I'll have to try this place out next time I'm down there. My cousin lives in Parkland.

No major bluetooth issues in 5 vehicles with OEM bluetooth here. Two GMs, two Fords and a Nissan. The Nissan (cube) system probably works the best out of all of them.

I noticed after clicking "publish". Obviously the builder messed up on that detail... ;)

Or it could just support the Grand National?

+1 for this one...

... Or like a rough draft version of a Tesla Model S.

So, then is a Hyundai Veloster a 4-door?

The Quad4 is lighter than the stock all-iron V6; an Ecotec would be lighter yet. I wouldn't see a heavy V8 being as rewarding to drive in this situation. It would sure be fun in those point-and-shoot situations, but it wouldn't instill confidence trying to accelerate out of a turn.

The Fiero probably tops the list of cars with ridiculous engine swaps. I'm sure the small block equipped ones can be scary fast and all, but for the handling I would rather have a lighter weight relatively high output 4-cylinder like the Quad4 or an Ecotec Turbo.

Things you don't usually associate. 5-speed Manual. RWD. Maxima.

"Some weird engine" that is one of the better balanced swaps for a Fiero. Although it would be better if it wasn't restricted with that 1st revision intake manifold and automatic transmission.

The guy talking in the video is definitely not a native.

Because racecar?

Will it come in all the other colors the current Mitsubishi Mirage comes in?

The K-Car has to be the most ordinary car of the '80s... The "standard" shape of the time, and no real outstanding features. They sure did sell a ton of them though.

That's the Cutlass 442 Hurst/Olds in the '80s.

This vehicle has a conventional hydraulic power steering and is not affected by the recall.