danielmaccabe
Daniel MacCabe
danielmaccabe

You are far too cool to talk to me.

It's hard to make a French car weirder... but he achieves it.

Tell that to submarines. Ohio class is 18K tonnes and is still properly called a boat.

The cost/benefit is wildly out of balance, that's why the Navy cut their buy of the Zumwalt class to only two ships and purchased a bunch more Arleigh Burke class DDGs - they're an awesome value and have huge capability in a very affordable and flexible package.

May I respectfully add the amazing Porsche 944. IMHO, the best handling car ever to come from the company, they're simple, reliable, and beautiful. Perhaps the 3.0L 4 is not the most captivating powerplant Porsche ever made, but it gets the job done.

eat them up.

I have no idea if it's mechanical bits can back up the promises that it's skin make, but that is a pretty damn sexy car. I wouldn't throw it out of bed. ;)

Odin save us from this monstrosity!

It sounds like... nothing.

Replacing an unreliable car with a wonky air suspension with a Land Rover! I actually laughed out loud at that!

After a bit of time with one side permanently adjusted to "broken" it finally got adjusted to "coilover." Nowhere near as nifty, but way cheaper to work on. :)

If Car Max stepped up you can be sure that Doug Demuro would be first in line! ;)

You forgot this beasty. Two engine choices, both sublime, 4.2L V8 or 2.7L biturbo V6. Available with a 6 speed manual, standard AWD, and an suspension that was adjustable from "S4 to H3"

sad, sad, sad.

There's one enormous problem with this kind of thing: Its completely safe if you're asking your passenger to do it for you. There is no way for the computer to tell if you're the driver or passenger.

I think there's a lot of good to come from studying things like Alcubierre/White drives. They are unlikely to actually work, but that doesn't actually matter at all. When we understand WHY they don't work, we'll be that much closer to coming up with something that does.

The Soviet Union had some amazing achievements in aviation, but sadly most are forgotten in the Western World because of the Cold War. In 1935 the ANT-25 designed by Andrei Tupolev set a distance record by flying from Moscow, over the North Pole, across all of Canada, and finally landing near Portland, OR. 3 people,

I wouldn't listen to that album for literally years because it bothered me so much to see a Plymouth Voyager with the caption El Camino.

I'm totally onboard with "horizontally opposed". It's a good descriptive phrase that sadly hasn't caught on as a standard. Probably because of confusion with the very obscure " true H" engine you found.

how about "flappy paddle?"