If self driving cars become so smart as to never run people over and make pedestrian impact regulations unnecesary I'd like mine to look like this.
If self driving cars become so smart as to never run people over and make pedestrian impact regulations unnecesary I'd like mine to look like this.
I completely agree. Except if this one's king of the land-yachts, the Decoliner is god.
That's 5 good condition E36 M3s. And money for tires. And supercharge one or two. Build one into a full blown racecar. Then, when you're done, go to lunch. At the most expensive restaraunt you can find. Follow that up by buying a helmet, racing suit, etc, and picking up a car off of CL and hitting up LeMons. …
Cannonball Baker Sea-To-Shining-Sea Memorial Trophy Dash
nice... but how about a roll up bridge, that also exists..
Maximum Bob is Maximum. Do not F' with this man:
The car feels like a 400k car.
I have a 2002 Eddie Bauer Expedition and money that I'm Willing to part with.
I bet it does. Poor people drive smaller cars, live in smaller houses and consume fewer raw materials.
'nuff said....
$80 fine, laughable. The mindblowingly expensive bureaucracy that had to generate the paperwork for the fine probably used $1000 worth of salary and materials to issue the citation.
usually, you get a fine/citation for doing something illegal, no? Two wrongs don't make a right and a citation should've been a foregone conclusion IMO.
I don't understand any of this but it sounds awesome.
He's retired - once you do that, the auto dealers' association gives back your common sense.
I can't say this about many vehicles, but I'd rather have a stock Astro van.
Ah, the Discovery Channel. The reason so many people are cutting the cord and relying on Netflix for their infotainment services. Why does every channel on cable have to be dumbed down not just to the lowest common denominator, but the lowest common denominator of your average Kentucky trailer park? I'm old enough…
$8k was way too much to pay for an Astro, even when it's new.
Brilliant execution of a terrible idea
Hedge funds?
Concerning the Tesla news, the company in question is "Longboard Asset Management", which currently has 2 accounts and a whopping 14.2 Million USD under management. I know we don't have to discriminate or anything, but it would be A LOT more interesting if it was a bigger company like Pictet, Invesco, BlackRock IMO…