They're also a Tier-2 supplier to VW - which, in Michael B's continual grasp for more clicks - neglected to mention.
They're also a Tier-2 supplier to VW - which, in Michael B's continual grasp for more clicks - neglected to mention.
Scaled Composites is looking to build a gigantic version of that out of a couple of former United 747-400s. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scaled_Co…
It's been 15 years since I was a Boy Scout and, by all accounts, I'm now a grown ass man. But, the impact the…
Reportedly, the driver got out and said "It's a Jeep thing, you wouldn't understand."
On the positive side, he won't impede a judicial system already at capacity. Heh.
Honestly, everybody needs to decamp the bandwagon. Almost everybody commenting is rattling off the same, elitist, load of crap. Commenter after commenter and the same knee-jerk, dumb-shit comments....
Because it doesn't say anything as to why they're too weak. Are they too weak because he ran over a curb and cracked one? Are they too weak because he took a turn hard and it broke at the hub? Are they too soft because the car doesn't handle well? Does he even know what he's talking about?
This is exactly what they were getting at. As an engineer in the automotive world, I can assure people that we don't tell people to not talk about problems, we just ask for a description of the issue instead of just "this is shit."
Ah, now I'm starting to understand the rising ocean levels.
It's for that retired guy who already owns a Corvette and wants to take BOTH of his grandkids for ice cream at a time.
I heard when he tees off, he shouts, "THIS MANY" to alert the players ahead of him.
IF Pontiac were still alive, and IF the Aztek came out in 2014, I think it'd be a hit. It could use a little styling clean up, but it would sell well today.
I'm being sarcastic.
Definitely has to be the Fiero!
That's going to give me nightmares.
"It may seem contradictory, but it's been a longstanding view at Jalopnik that an increase in public transit usage is a good thing for car culture. Why?"
It's an advanced theoretical system called Schrodinger's drivetrain. It is both 4wd and not-4wd simultaneously, with the number of wheels being driven being a hypothetical condition dependent on the outcome of a previous random event. In this case, unfortunately, that random event is "the vehicle was built by…
What do you get when you smush a Subaru and a Mitsubishi?
MUUUUUUUUUSSSSSSSSKKKK!!!
Speaking as an aerospace engineer, the first thought that comes to mind: