Honda screwed up not selling the Integra and NSX as a Honda. There’s so much important heritage there.
Honda screwed up not selling the Integra and NSX as a Honda. There’s so much important heritage there.
Those are great. I’m referring to these...
Not significantly, but there’s like a few thousand difference where I live. This might have changed recently as more people have probably figured it out.
The Alphard is a luxury van mainly operated in fleet type environments.
HiAce > Alphard
Using tired old humor on the USPS is just not going to pass muster here. Fortunately many of the commentators on this forum are better versed in history.
I love the Land Cruiser for what it is, but the American culture around it confuses me. That the 80 Series Land Cruiser is more desirable than an 80 Series LX450 tells me that the fanbase has lost objectivity and is in self parody territory.
Those are absolutely priorities for the fleet operators who run most of these. It’s not cost effective for Toyota to design a RWD Alphard, so the choice simply doesn’t present itself.
You can see it, it doesn’t mean it’s useful.
If only they didn’t keep raiding the postal service revenue.
And that’s why the homeboys had such great wisdom.
And that’s why we need more smiling aerobics.
Would he get written up for that?
But seriously, the 996 and 997 have nearly useless speedometers. You have to rely on the digital readout. This is fine for a race car, but I think it’s horrible design for a street car.
The fact that it’s not the original.
For such a driver focused car, I find it strange the Porsche never spent any money making their gauge cluster more functional.
Mr. Judge summed it up nicely. I think we saw a change in the 90s as more individuals entered the stock market and large corporations were using less bank financing.
Because he is smart and doesn’t want to get involved.
So. Just another January 26th for Massachusetts.
I’m assuming this measurement is based on market cap. No manufacturing company has had a market cap like that since the 60s. Wall Street simply values them lower and insane for tech. If you use some other metrics like actual goods produced, America still manufacturers many industrial goods.