Yeah, I think the off-white exterior is quite nice myself.
Yeah, I think the off-white exterior is quite nice myself.
I've had my used 2007 Cayman for two years, and honestly, maintenance has been pretty normal. Yes a regular service is more expensive than a Toyota, but I've had absolutely no issues otherwise. There are still German cars that are reliable. This is not a BMW that will have electrical issues every few months.
I bought my used 2007 Cayman two years ago. Apart from maintenance, haven't had to do one damn thing to it. Boringly reliable, these cars.
Yep, we're 30, have a small kid, and the Volvo v50 is pretty much the ideal car for someone in our situation. It has plenty of room in the wagon form factor, while still being small and dynamic enough to not be a total snooze on the road. I'm pretty sure it will handle two kids (our max) just fine. It'll be a cold day…
Great review. Needs more photos of BBQ.
Not too simple at all. This is what a good honest car design looks like when you don't load it up with silly trends full of "flame surfacing". I'm liking it!
At least admit this is a bullshit story put on here for clicks.
I don't hate minivans. I think they are awesome. They hold a ton of crap even when it's up to passenger capacity, can be turned into make-shift cargo vans on the fly, you can camp in them if you want/need to, haul wood and other large crap home from Home Depot, make your kids sit in the back row and feel like a boss,…
I agree with the rest on this list, but I think Jason Castriota is horribly overrated. His cars to me feel like overwrought art-school concepts. There's no clear idea, so it's just a bunch of junk on top of junk. Nothing of his looks even remotely timeless.
If you're a guy who likes rare 80's Fiats, something tells me a Mustang won't you happy, no matter how much of a screaming deal it is.
Knowing how hard it is to pronounce for non-native speakers, it's kind of funny seeing all these Hungarian names flying all over Jalopnik the last few days.