SagarikaLumos
SagarikaLumos
SagarikaLumos

You're right. The dashboard is that of the older car.

It also can't be started when it's 5 degrees outside.

Anybody who has had to daily drive an emission-controlled carbureted car knows the vast superiority of fuel injection, especially when it's 6 degrees outside. The answer is to not integrate the entertainment system (with its user-available I/O of USB or iPod connectors) with the engine's computer.

I'm sorry, but it seems that somebody shit my pants.

If that covers a ventilation hole and starts a fire, that would be one expensive mismatched bed set. Seriously, a Lamborghini driver and they went to Craigslist for some Bed Bugs & Beyond?

I love original Minis, and I have a dog named Riley, but I wouldn't pay close to $27,000 for that.

You made assumptions about a picture and now you're trying to say that I misunderstood what you meant? When you assumed she was American, you placed yourself in a position of having to answer to that assumption. When you thought she was American, you used her clothing as an indictment of the entire American auto

Funny. If the dealer hadn't gotten spooked and called him, he might never have made the connection.

Actually, it's from "Snatch," but the idea about the music is similar.

"I don't know. How are you going to make it come?"

(see below) That plant is German. Still want to use it as commentary on the workers' motivation? Does that still somehow make American cars inferior? Non-UAW plants all over the US (and a few under the union thumb as well) produce products with excellent quality. It's all about motivation and attitude (good

I bet he buys rear axles and differentials as often as I buy gas.

I just don't think that the exclusion and specificity is necessary, especially when referencing a strap. Every DSLR is an SLR, but not every SLR is a DSLR. If it's something like straps, tripods, or bags, it's certainly usable to the film users as well. The articles on shooting HD video with a DSLR aren't. Perhaps

I'm a little surprised it ever actually ran. No specifics about the engine and only wide angle shots make me think it could be a bad PCH, too. That approach angle is a bitch.

I believe their color is listed by the color of the actual body, yellow in the case of the car above. Notice that the roof, rocker, and quarter panels are all yellow, so that's likely the color of the "car." All the other panels are just bolt-ons. Just my guess.

That's far too much money, but I do love it ever so much. It's too bad the coupe Panther didn't make it through the 80s.

Why is it necessary for SLR cameras to always be referred to here as DSLR, especially when one in the picture isn't? Is this strap somehow incompatible with film? For that matter, does describing any camera accessory as for SLR use prevent it from being used on digital models? Not everything has to be "digital" in

The first 35mm SLRs were very available before the war. Nobody is quite sure who was first, but they were out there. Contenders for first are the very rare Soviet "Sport" and the quite common German Exakta. Both debuted in 1936.

Am I the only one who got a sort of "Mr. Rogers" feeling from the jazzy piano accompaniment?

They might be using too much. The flavor of the wine (or beer) should only be a hint. It shouldn't come close to dominating.