It was a wonderfully clear day in Hong Kong when we had the photo made. Unfortunately though the skies were very wrinkly that day.
It was a wonderfully clear day in Hong Kong when we had the photo made. Unfortunately though the skies were very wrinkly that day.
BOO THIS MAN!
The Lexus dealer i worked at had everything from a full cafe, Xbox's for the kids, extra snack bar, awesome lighting/furniture/TV's, and a room that had a waterfal and lady giving massages. plus the sexy little cashiers to make you forget about the squeaky brakes on your IS250
Spot on review; I own a 2011 R/T and have made many of the same or similar comments to myself. Too quiet inside, too subtle a throttle/acceleration push, heavy car, no manual, great infotainment screen. I would venture that after the next refresh (2015?), when the 8-sp is available with the V8, it will feel worlds…
5.7l is a 345, not a 325.
I had a 2011, and I now have a 2013 300, with the same powertrain setup and similar options / toys. All I can say, is that I'm really glad that you tested this car where you did, because that's the point. These big Chryslers are the absolute ULTIMATE road trip cars; cozy, powerful, intuitive controls, exciting enough…
I own a '13 R/T Super Trak Pack. Test one of those. It has the 3.06 gear, Upgraded brakes, tighter suspension, throw back "Torque Thrust 2" wheels and I added Flowmaster Super 44's. Its a blast to drive, and I have even gotten "Thumbs Up" from police.
This car really needs a manual transmission, even it has 2% take rate.
345 cubic inches. 325 would be 5.3 liters
If you switch between cars a lot, but know about this rule, it's incredibly helpful. I switch between 3 cars on a weekly basis and one of them has it on the left and 2 have it on the right, or maybe it's 2 have it on the left. See? I don't even know, and I've owned these cars for between 4 and 7 years.
Chances are you're texting anyway. omg just wrecked lol.
St Marten's Maho Beach was full of close flyby/landings until recently.
If only trains had some kind of a track they could follow so people would know where one might be operating.