LoganAdams
LoganAdams
LoganAdams

My last vehicle was a 93 Dodge Dakota with the V8. Tiny little truck with 318 cubic inches of lunacy under the hood. So much fun. I miss that truck.

It depends on the state. If it were in Kansas, where I grew up, it would have been a pretty steep ticket (but nothing compared to Canada). If it were in North Dakota, it would have been been minor.

I've had two stock vehicles that did that. It happened whenever the switch in the driver's door was turned on to disable the rear windows. My little siblings loved it because it meant they could annoy me when I drove them somewhere and we reached our destination.

Someone made this ... and drove it ... in public?

I don't know how there could be teenagers out there who could possibly afford a new vehicle. I drive a used pickup that I paid $15,000 for after taxes. To buy a new one with the exact same specs (except more modern engine and fewer miles) would cost me $45,000. I am five years out of college and I doubt I'll ever be

To paraphrase Victor Hugo, nothing is as powerful as an idea whose time has come.

Thanks for the tip.

So, to have this job writing about cars, one must live in the NYC area. But life in NYC for car owners in miserable.

Interesting.

It says either "710" or "OIL."

I once test drove an early-90s Ford F-150 with about 180,000 miles. It was a stick shift, and I wasn't very good and driving a stick yet. I had just gotten done with a drive when I pulled it into the lot to park it. For some odd reason this $2,800 pickup was to be kept between a bunch of brand new trucks, so I had to

I had just bought it at the time of this photo. The light bar was broken then. I still haven't fond the problem with it. A previous owner installed a bunch of accessories and did a rather poor job of it.

Not if you work in newspapers.

My truck doesn't crash twice a day.

My first car: 1990 Jeep Cherokee bought in 2000. $3,000.

So say we all.

Dear 1990 Jeep Cherokee Laredo,

If Ferris goes over and "borrows" a new, very fast car that Honda has kept under wraps until now, this could work. Like an S2000 reborn. An S2012, perhaps?

Depends on where I'm doing my secret agent work.

I've done 20" prints with a 2005-era DSLR (8MP) and, after comparing print to print, I prefer the 6x9. Especially at wide angles where the rangefinder really wins out (No retrofocus lens design).