Hombre3000
Hombre3000
Hombre3000

I remembered seeing him talk about serviceability and parts in a video, I wish I could forward it to you. Honestly I don't know how much thought has gone into all of that, but the build quality looks pretty good from the videos I've seen.

This is fucking ludicrous.

I'm pretty sure there were only 5. I know that one of them used to race at the Monterey historics every year, driven by the Armstrong family.

Pretty much the coolest, dumbest, most ridiculous car ever.

So it would seem, but there aren't many other things you can do with a wagon's window line without making new glass for the rear doors.

I'm not telling you that it's easy to get into. The bubble would probably not have been necessary had the driver not been wearing a helmet. I know it's sort of a strange/obscure point, but some of these became road cars. That's all I'm saying. I know it's not huge inside, but they're not tiny either, I've seen a lot

Right there with you. I almost bought one as my first car but just couldn't do it. I think with the right seats it could work, but I'm a little shorter than you.

There was a helmet involved.

This makes me very sad! I still want one!

This is why I'm studying to be an engineer and why I love America.

Insightful, thanks for sharing.

". . . price of the Nissan Juke R . . . around $600,000 . . . That's roughly the equivalent of 30 base Juke Rs."

Uh . . . what in the hell does that mean? And your link broke.

I'm going to tentatively agree with you.

Think whatever you want to think, California is a beautiful state with great roads and . . . you guessed it . . . a coastline!

"Once again proving that Florida is a terrible place to own a car, a local news crew busted a local parking lot owner who took a customer's Corvette and treated it like his own plaything for a couple of days."

They rust pretty easily from what I hear.

Zero rust, complete original interior in great shape, original motor and transmission (from what I can tell).