So if you’ve driven all three, which one did you like the best?
So if you’ve driven all three, which one did you like the best?
Or a ZR1.
No, all Civic Type R’s are FWD.
Yeah, that definitely looks like it could be when they switched from a production chassis to a tube frame. The new car has that generic JGTC/SuperGT car look that all the newer cars have.
You’ve never actually driven on winter tires, have you? When I first moved to Chicago, I bought a winter beater. It came with all seasons, which I kept to use the car for home depot runs (hatchbacks ftw), etc. But I bought a set of winter tires on steelies for use in the winter. Guess which ones I had more fun on?…
I was almost certain this was going to be NP based on the title alone. Then I saw the engine. CP.
The rules didn’t remain the same for all time, however. JGTC cars used to be based on production chassis. SuperGT cars are not. However, I’m not sure that change coincided with the rename of the racing series, it may have happened earlier.
Would an 80's M3 actually be a more comfortable daily driver than a modern Civic Type R?
For $4000, maybe. $14000 is serious CP.
Reminds me of when I lived in an apartment and had some neighbors who consistently started yelling at each other every night around midnight. After a week of this I was tired of hearing it and turned up the music just loud enough so I couldn’t hear them anymore. Got a complaint from the landlord the next day with a…
Yeah, I had to buy one for my wife’s Honda Fit too. It is also pretty flimsy. My ‘91 Integra came with one, so I don’t know if they all did or not, but it’s was pretty sturdy (and made a huge reduction in road noise vs having the seats down).
Most, if not all, hatchbacks have parcel shelves which separate (most of) the hatch area from the passenger area.
Not to mention that Florida summers are quite rainy. Water could fall from the sky at any moment and destroy his car’s windshield.
I put it on automatically as well, but on the rare case that I am distracted by something and forget, I actually feel uncomfortable not to be wearing it.
6. B, but I’ll only accept the car if the CRT touchscreen is in working condition.
I would have just left the phone where it was. Chances are it would have ended up on the ground on it’s own.
You can already create and share maps in Google Maps. No self-driving necessary, just follow the GPS. Except you can’t set it to follow an actual route, just pick destinations on a shared map, so it’s not _quite_ what you want. But it easily could be, if Google was so inclined. Google has some here:
I joined Emotionally Repressed Mazdas just for the Furai.
My understanding is the average used to be 12K, but as people have moved farther and farther away from city centers it’s grown to 15K. I’ve never heard 18K for normal people. Maybe road warriors or something. That said, my wife’s used Honda Fit came with an average of 20K miles per year over 7 years. It was in…
If you consistently put more than 15K/year on it, then your car always has more miles than the average car of it’s year.