Uhhhhh..
Uhhhhh..
Full Disclosure
The one from my youth must have been broken then because I remember having the spare tire flat many times. It might have had something to do with my uncle’s trick of inflating the tire to 100 PSI and then using the washers as a big portable squirt gun.
Yes but there was a good chance the spare was flat due to the windshield washer setup...
I thought this was a shoe win for COTD..
Having the car shut down when the key is out of range would be unsafe.
The original GM keyless entry system used a simple motion sensor (I think a small bb in a cage) that turned off the transmitter when the fob was motionless for a certain amount of time. At the time it was to make the battery life reasonable. I think this should make a comeback.
Sorry, The technology and stuff is GMC only...
No glowing orbs..
Watching NHRA there are times when the slower time wins because of a bad reaction time. The big boys don’t go by E.T. but include reaction time? It that how I got it wrong?
So now I’m confused..
And if the ZR1 driver had the same .0635 reaction time as the Demon driver the Vette would have turned in a 9.9267
Demon got a .0635 reaction time. ZR1 got a .3386. The Vette would have been sub 10 if the driver was awake. But then the night would be over because neither car had the required equipment to run that fast.
I’d suggest you go to Flint Michigan and talk to a few people there about the superiority of public water supplies.
It current takes a pit crew member 3-5 seconds to remove and replace a wheel/tire assembly using 10 $2 lug nuts and $5 worth of glue.
The other option is the builder did disclose on form 17. That puts the burden on the buyers then. They knowingly purchased the property with a troubled water supply.
I would be interested in seeing g a copy of the form 17 for all property sold in that subdivision.
Developer measured 4x normal level of sodium in 1997 as they we’re building the subdivision. They sold the houses and never disclosed that information. GM never said there wasn’t any contamination, they only argued the root cause. The developer should be on the hook for failure to disclose!
I..