elhigh
Elhigh
elhigh

I haven’t gone quite to that extreme but I’ve had about 500lbs in the back of the Prius on a few trips.  20 miles, no problem.

There are some trailers that are designed to fold and store standing up, take up about 2x6' in the garage floor.

Between the 1000 lbs I can shovel into the bed of my old truck and the additional 1740 lbs rated for the trailer, I can move a mighty amount of stuff all at once with a very modest vehicle. Trailers rock.

This was an option. GM could have brought us this:

Just to clarify, as with all things there are certain examples of BMW I would be perfectly happy to take home: a 1976 2002 for instance, or a late-80sE30 with the eta six.  Mmm, torque.

Whoo, lookit that hub steer front. Sexxaay.

I’m not a big fan of BMW or convertibles, so this one is a double nope from me as a kneejerk reaction but let’s unpack the offering anyway.

Well that’s just terrible because the E is one of the nicest of the new generation of retro models I’ve ever seen.  

See the car: YES!

I almost clicked ND when I saw the swap.

A 4wd FFV would be smart for the snow-prone parts of the country. For that matter, an LLV body might could fit on an S10 frame fitted with the 4wd components.

Sometimes it’s a different cop but usually it’s just this one guy.

The most interesting bike in this list is the Neander. I’ll tell you why:

Trust a guy calling himself “Half-track El Camino” to have this take, which is a very good one in my humble opinion.

Love it. Want it.

I want to like it because the Century/Celebrity twins were an example of GM doing a pretty good job. They started out as not bad for an American car and the manufacturer winnowed out the persnickety faults as time went on. The Celebrity bowed out early - too bad - but Buick kept the Century around for another six

And all of that said, maybe. If I recall correctly my factory original Toyota oil filters were in fact Purolator, just black instead of white and with Toyota numbers.

Barn find story time.

This is why I say autonomous self driving cars aren’t ready for the real world. Even on a closed course, one that could have been completely programmed into the computer’s memory so the car would have 100% foreknowledge of its environment, and with nothing else anywhere near it...

Only Mitsuoka could bring us a car that simultaneously looks like a fish, and it’s spitting.  Not the spitting image of a fish, but a spitting fish.