Well, I’ll be damned. They do!
Well, I’ll be damned. They do!
The man airplane seats were engineered for:
Honestly, an android double DIN head unit would probably sell well. Just give some options on connectivity. (eg: BT tether for basic up through LTE for high end)
My top match was a Chevy Colorado, which actually is pretty well spot on as I would totally dig one (just can’t afford the one I want...). #2 and #3 weren’t even close at a Buick Encore and a Chrysler 200.
Pre-made cups for the following pies:
I spent many a road trip in the back of an ‘84 Jimmy. Worst part was vinyl seats on hot days, but otherwise was a pretty solid car.
Enough apparently.
I do 10% of the cooking on the stove but 100% of the cleaning. When it comes to the grill, I still do 100% of the cleaning, but I happily do it as I do 100% of the cooking there. I own my messes.
*takes test expecting a trainwreck*
We don’t have time to spend five percent of our attention driving! You can’t expect people to be constantly pressing on pedals when they have stuff they need to do, like post twitter messages about the food they’re eating.
The 4.7 Dakotas.
Part of me wishes that there was some sort of museum for siezed cars to be shown for public viewing, like it was a normal car museum, and then if the cars are deemed to be returned they can be returned all washed and pretty instead of the usual banged up and abused. You don’t need to show off all the cars, I mean,…
We once paid a junkyard $50 to TAKE a Chevette that my uncle limped into our driveway from 25 miles away.
That’s almost 12,000,001 ml!
Messerschmitt did it better:
Porsche did this, but with two pieces of glass so one could slide under the other and become a Targa, the view out the rear then had to go through both panels though.
As someone who has spent his entire career in the medical device industry. The rules may appear stupid and the regulations onerous, but there is a reason for it. And usually there is an example of what happens when you don’t follow them.
“Put a pot of chili on the back of the stove to simmer. Let it keep simmering. Meanwhile, broil a good sirloin steak. Eat the steak. Let the chili continue to simmer. Then ignore it.”—Lt Governor of Texas, maybe.
The ‘78 GMC my dad had rocked a 400 small block, I sat on the fender with my feet on the frame rails to change spark plugs. They came with optional 454s. So the answer can be summarized as this:
I learned to drive and wrench on a ‘78 GMC. There is NOTHING hard about this. And $900? You’re lucky nobody from here hasn’t posted a picture of cash and keys swapping for this bad boy yet.