elgordo47
elgordo47
elgordo47

I’m neither agreeing nor disagreeing with you on climate change or any ambition that “they” may have to end private vehicle ownership.

So we’re still not going to talk about Ford’s announcement yesterday that they’ve filed patents for technology that will enable them to remotely shut down your air conditioning or turn off your radio or stop your windows from rolling up or down if you miss a loan payment? Or alternatively to remotely activate a

A long, long time ago, when I was still operating on the assumption that my metabolism could handle fast food with minimal consequences for ever, I would also go to a nearby Wendy’s for lunch a couple times a week.

This isn’t entirely a complaint but Wendy’s burgers are greasy. Like, even when you get them directly at the restaurant, halfway through, the bun is usually almost liquified. I cannot imagine their condition after delivery time. Since you can’t get plastic straws anymore, how would you even eat it?

I’m not endorsing criminal behaviour but with that out of the way, I have always been of the mindset that IF you’re going to do something illegal, go big or go home. So Ferraris are a good choice. But then there’s the “assorted merchandise”. Was it really necessary to spend the extra time in there grabbing some

Just went to the auto show here in my city and I couldn’t get over how a $60,000 (CAD) MSRP is just being normalized now. I mean, you don’t even get anything fancy for that. WTF?

When I was a lot younger and generally making a lot of questionable decisions, I once purposely tailgated a fully marked cop car. When he inevitably lit me up and pulled me over, from in front naturally, he basically asked me what my problem was and why I was driving so close. I told him he was going too slow, which

I’m assuming they’re filming VinFast VinFurious and needed a fleet.

Neutral: I don’t know if an auto show constitutes a sighting “in the wild”. Officially I’m going to say no. But I did see a Koenigsegg Regera and a 2005 Spyker C8 side by side when I went last weekend to the Toronto auto show. I think they were there as a part of a Barrett-Jackson display but I’m not sure and didn’t

Yup. Left the name out just because for most outside of Toronto, Yorkdale probably doesn’t mean anything.

Believe me when I say everything about the store’s layout and design, right down to the flooring, has a marketing purpose. I can’t tell you exactly what each purpose may be and how it’s supposed to work but ultimately the entire design is to entice you to buy more/spend more.

This is Toronto. Apparently there’s a showroom studio in a shopping mall here that caters to high end retailers. Sort of makes sense that it wouldn’t be a typical dealership. Not as though they have an extensive lineup to display. I don’t know if that’s where this particular owner sourced his car though.

True, at least on the build quality front. But the car owner said the luxury aspect came down to everything from ride, sound and the tactile feel of the materials and controls.

Challenger is your answer. I’ve had a V8 of one sort or another almost all my driving life (40 years). I own a late model Challenger now, purely as the sort of car that our reader is asking for, and nothing before has ever made me smile so consistently as this car. It does everything. It does it well. And mostly, it’s

1st Gear: Guy in my building has a Lucid Air. Also a Tesla (clearly committed to the cause). I talked to him when I had the chance to ask him about the Air. He said he loves it. It’s much higher quality and luxury feel than the Tesla. Only issue he said was finding an appropriate charging station. Didn’t get a chance

If you visualize that interior without the screens and light strips lit up, it couldn’t get any more unimpressive. And I’m being pretty generous about the light up stuff too. 

I agree with another poster that the service and quality is highly variable by location. There’s one in the small city where my outlaws live, and this location is probably patronized by almost 100 percent retired people. The quality is average but the service, like the speed of its dominant clientele, is very slow and

Ah, originally from BC and wanted for, among other things, failure to comply. Yeah, we’ve kind of got a catch and release thing going on up here and it’s not limited to fishing.

Well, you’re not understanding the genius of problem solving that is using quarter round household moldings in commercial vehicle manufacturing. Consider that until now, no one has ever thought to send their engineers over to the local Home Depot to correct a manufacturing defect. Next you’re going to say they

Mmmm... organized crime.