I’m shopping for a Q5 lease for my sister right now. She wants the car today.
I’m shopping for a Q5 lease for my sister right now. She wants the car today.
I need a RWD 707hp Caravan in my life.
The only appropriate answers:
Thinking more about this - the lack of incentive to negotiate is why I buy my cars in Orlando or Tampa - even though I live in Miami.
Actually Tom, you hit the nail on the head with the manual transmission post - I will not buy an automatic car - so when I see manual, but an automatic shifter in the photos, I move on.
I drive an orange Mini. Unless there are SUVs surrounding me in every direction, I can see it easily.
I remember some manufacturers did back in the 90's. They’d make a CARB car and a 49-state car. When other states began adopting CARB standards in the 00's, 49-state cars became rarer and rarer.
Miami’s the land of the lease. I have coworkers that swap out cars every 6 months through swapalease or leasetrader.
When more than 10 other states signed onto CARB standards, it no longer was cost effective to make a California Car and an ‘other-states’ car. Furthermore, EPA and CARB standards were harmonized in 2016.
It isn’t illegal. And if California were to make it illegal, the Supreme Court would strike it down as unconstitutional.
Tom - this happened to me, but without having to leave the same state.
I bought one back home, because it was literally the only four door sedan on the entire island for sale at the time with a manual transmission.
As a city dweller and a young adult, I have thought about getting something on two wheels.
My biggest “wows” have been a Veyron on I95, a G63 6X6, and a 918 with Saudi plates on the beach.
Street parking an M1 on NW 7th is a ballsy move.
NP. I’ll take 10.
When I read “PASCO”, I really hoped it would have been Pasco County, FL... because you know, Florida Man.
About fucking time. Between this and the Governor of PR suspending tax collection at the port of all relief supplies, all we need are the truck drivers to get on board.
I’m from PR. Realistically, all they’d need to do is get trucks loaded onto vessels in Jacksonville, and get them down to PR. Provided diesel supplies hold out, the governor makes an exception of import duties on those vehicles entering the island, and the trucker’s union doesn’t pitch a fit, there’s no reason they…