You’re going to get held up on i70 with the econobox and summer tires. Then get a ticket from the staties for being unprepared. HMU if you want to borrow a tsx with 4 brand new x-ice snows on it, I'm in boulder!
You’re going to get held up on i70 with the econobox and summer tires. Then get a ticket from the staties for being unprepared. HMU if you want to borrow a tsx with 4 brand new x-ice snows on it, I'm in boulder!
This wouldn't be worth $11k if reagon himself owned it.
I though about doing this one time with an old brat, but figured the high center of gravity and suspension of the car would make it too squirrely. One thing I've learned is no matter what you dream up there is someone on the highway doing something dumber.
Its the opposite in Colorado. It's pretty easy to end up on a trail you need rock sliders for, and probably impossible to run them all.
It takes time to add your info to the marketing database.
I considered this, but I don't want the liability of turo renting someone's truck to take camping in the desert loaded up with ATVs, nor do I want to pay to take the truck on a long camping trip from time to time. My brand new truck had scratches down the side within a month owning it, and I'm fine with that
The tundra is holding the fort down on the NA v8 engines with 2008 transmission. You lose a little on economy though, mine averages about 13 overall
A a tundra buyer, the compromises they made on it are much more acceptable than the compromises made by other full size trucks. I actually liked the simpler interior, the six speed transmission, and the conventional v8 engine. _It has an actual, real gas cap_. I didn't care one bit that it *might* theoretically,…
As a tundra buyer, the taco probably makes more sense if you need to park in a parking structure of some sort, and people are willing to pay a premium for a vehicle they can use without having to have another commuter vehicle. Both the taco and the Ridgeline I cross shopped ended up at a ~$4000 premium over the tundra…
Just who do you think is BUILDING all of these things? It is so called millennials like me! I think it’s encouraging myself- things being easy in other parts of life mean I can get even more specialized in what I’m interested in and what makes me the most money.
My 2018 tundra is probably the last petrol vehicle I will buy, I recently realized. I guess I made it count!
This is a pretty competitive offering, all the gripes about Nissan not innovating like they used to anymore, well we’re seeing it right here with the Scrappy leaf which looks to be the people’s electric car. Sure they aren’t producing neat little rwd coupes like back in the 80s, but the leaf is 2019 innovative and…
Agreed on the dual sport, I rode a klx250 in Honolulu city traffic for years. Narrow, light, highly visible neon green, and you could see above all but this tallest vehicles
Sadly I feel the same way. Would love to be back out on two wheels, but have had so many close calls and a few times been hit in cars/trucks, I just ride 100% off-road nowadays.
Cool bike. Did you consider the ferry?
For a backdoor to be present in open source software, everyone having looked at the code and understood it would have to be in on a conspiracy to not speak up about the backdoor.
How insulting of them to insinuate that you are some clueless fool with culture shock and couldn’t drive stick shift. I applaud your restraint.
Id love one, but it won't pull the RV I plan to live in to stay mobile and out of overpriced apartment leases!
Boulder Colorado: if you work for a company in the designated downtown area, you get a free bus pass. This probably prevents a ton of parking problems and unnecessary traffic, I hope they expand it citywide and give free bus passes to anyone working for a company operating within Boulder City limits.
This is a typical symptom of bad voltage reference wire. If it’s on the alternator, check any engine grounds. If it’s in the ecu, check the firewall ground points.