davidj210
davidj210
davidj210

Apparently you could have found the answer in your physics class.

Edit: Crap, it happened to me too.

I guess that depends on how bad (good, in your opinion?) it is in your particular car. Like most cars, my car does this when the back windows are down and the fronts are up. At highway speeds, it is physically painful, like my ears are constantly popping.

I have zero experience with rear engine cars, but my understanding is that having all that weight at the back makes them very tail happy. It's like having a great big pendulum hanging off the back. Presumably, having a bit less weight at the back would make them a bit easier to handle.

I can confirm that a $1 million insurance policy is pretty typically required to get a permit for something like this.

He fights crime from a top-secret prototype 3-wheeler that he found sitting around in the basement.

I still maintain that in terms of roofs per dollar, my Impreza is a better value.

At $20,000 for one roof, my Impreza is a better value than this Lambo which costs 5 million dollars for no roofs.

touche, it cracks. Not sure how that's any better.

Potential problem: Get a dent in your body panel battery? The battery no longer works and will probably catch fire immediately.

Abusing rental cars is a time-honored tradition.

This one has sick pictures of cars and trucks on it:

Duly noted.

This was featured on Top Gear recently. They each had a supercar, and kept losing at the drag strip to riced-out Jettas and ratty(but souped up) pickups owned by the fire department or something.

Are those numbers specific to the USA? Many places still use leaded gas. Also, 34,000 car crash deaths per year sounds awfully low for the whole world.

Think you may have the wrong video for #2.

Neutral: I currently have no desire for a car without a steering wheel. That being said, I'm 24 years old. I expect to be driving for at least another 50 years. Will it be easy to buy a new car with a steering wheel in 50 years, or will it severely restrict your options, like finding a car with a manual

Yes.

I see. I had a 2012 Outback as a loaner car once. I think the parking brake would automatically release if you tried to drive away with it still set.