Is that why Tesla started the wrap side business? To help hide the ugliness of the stainless steel finish?
Is that why Tesla started the wrap side business? To help hide the ugliness of the stainless steel finish?
I had the same question. Battery only?
In my former life as a lot attendant we had a Ford SVT Contour as a trade in once, and it had the “reverse ring” on the shifter. That was my first encounter with such a thing. Took me a minute to solve that puzzle.
I think I’ve identified compartments for my T-shirt cannon and my collection of wind-up toys.
We almost had a Ferrari F150.
I see how it’s mathematically possible with two tubes, but I don’t think I’ve seen two tubes in the road since I was a child. That link has sources from 2009. I assume it’s all done with radar now. I could be wrong (again).
Based on the lack of evidence at hand, and Trump being Trump, that was probably a lie to sell limos.
I did see that, it appears to be the same green one from the photo shoot above. I was trying to find him behind the wheel, not just near a Lambo.
I get that it varies by region, but it’s still all a dealer lobbying racket, and we shouldn’t be forced to bend over and take it. When I sold cars, we didn’t have doc fees. Where I work now (in finance) our back office will do DMV work for free (at cost, no fee). The dealers should do it for free as well. After all,…
My initial thought was that this island is too remote and too inconsequential to have seen any WWII action, but nope, turns out it saw WWII action.
I did a little google search, and found no evidence. However, I did find this picture of him having a 3-way with his daughter and a green lambo. Sorry if you’re eating right now.
His fat ass may have owned it, but are we sure he ever crammed his fat ass into it? Does he even have a driver’s license? Has he ever been spotted behind the wheel of anything that is not a parked vehicle or a golf cart?
I’m not surprised if we’re just talking about something like a speeding ticket, but these are fatalities, which would count as an extraordinary circumstance in my book. I live on a busy highway, and when there’s a fatality, they close the road for hours on end to investigate. Seems like getting a judge to subpoena…
WA State. Some of it’s a regional thing around the country, and it’s also “recently” getting more common. When I sold cars we didn’t have doc fees. I had to negotiate it out of my last transaction. My two transactions before that didn’t have doc fees. There’s a local dealer that runs radio ads, and even in their ad,…
To Poop, or to Poopenaut, that is the question.
When I bought my last car there was a second sticker “Care” package added for $395 if I remember the amount correctly. I asked the saleswoman what do I actually get with this Care package. She didn’t have a good answer. Basically (in my words) her answer amounted to the fact that they were charging for the dealer prep…
Why should there be a doc fee? I’ve never paid one.
More than a few seconds? That’s way too long to divert your attention from the road.
Kind of surprised that derailments are more common than obstruction accidents. Derailments seem like more of an “us” problem that you can mostly have control over, while accidents seem like more of a “them” problem where something/someone is getting in the way of a train.
What do government organizations like Homeland Security and such think of requiring AM radio in cars? I don’t have AM radio in my house, so if shit hits the fan and I need to receive information via AM radio, I’m going to use my car. In situations like hurricanes and tornados, electricity and cell phones often don’t…