Well, at least them being removeable means that round aftermarket ones should be easy to create and install
Well, at least them being removeable means that round aftermarket ones should be easy to create and install
This just in: part of what kitchen stainless steel cleaner does is remove minor surface rust from (low quality) stainless steel.
Looks great. I don’t see how they’re going to be able to deliver a low enough weight to be as dynamic as they want, at a reasonable cost, and with enough range for the North American market in a full EV though.
The A110 is mostly noteworthy and special because of how light it is for a modern sports car
I liked the idea of the Mad Max game. In practice I found the driving fun but wished there were substantially less time spent out of the car because the melee combat was pretty generic. Never actually finished it.
It’s all the exact same arguments against banning specific firearms. Criminals were already criminals and don’t care, the objects being banned aren’t the ones being used in the crimes, the government doesn’t understand the capabilities of what they are banning, etc etc.
The premise was to use an MX-5 cup car. They already have:
The vast majority of all-seasons are M+S rated, it’s a trivial rating to get for a typical ‘true all-season’ pattern. The laws in Quebec, BC, etc basically only disallow full summer tires. (And really ought to be updated to requiring 3PMSF).
The 3-peak mountain snowflake rating (3PMSF) is a substantially better…
A ‘74 Spitfire also uses your knees as crumple zones. It’s a massive feat of engineering that they were able to make a car so small and light with current safety standards. The original Mini also had incredible room inside for its size because it had zero safety whatsoever, that’s not a car that is possible to make…
Becomes more prophetic every day...
No ability to lock the diffs + extremely rigid air suspension when raised to full height means no traction. Shouldn’t be a surprise for anyone except Tesla’s marketing department.
I had an old CM450E with that gauge! Always thought that was a genius move, no real need for a tach
Sure, except:
- It doesn’t actually have SH-AWD in the rear differential like any of the other cars, it’s only the front electric motors that do torque vectoring
- It’s a bit of a stretch to call a $150,000+ vehicle a ‘sports car’
I’ve always found the way Honda/Acura presents SH-AWD to be a weird business proposition. They’ve got an AWD system with a very cool rear differential capable of doing proper torque vectoring like an old Evo or a Focus RS....and they put it in crossovers and sedans where nobody will really appreciate it and they…
It literally burns oil as part of normal operation. oil needs to be injected into the combustion chamber to lubricate the apex seals.
While I agree with you that Subaru should do that, what you described is a GR Corolla competitor rather than GR Yaris, unless they manage to cut several hundred pounds out of the WRX and shorten it into a 2 door.
Well that’s exactly what I needed. Even more reasons to be sad we don’t get it in Canada. Thanks Toyota.
And no, the Corolla is not an acceptable substitute. It’s cool enough, but 2 extra doors and 500 extra pounds do not an equivalent car make.
Supra is probably the correct choice here, unless you want to occasionally cram extra humans in the car. Then it’s probably a used 911 of some form, or a pony car.
I’m really loving the trend in recent years of enthusiast cars having strong demand for manual transmissions. I think the people who buy fast cars for bragging rights etc have mostly moved onto electric vehicles, so the people still buying M2s are proportionally more enthusiasts who care about the experience.