I’m not opposed to the edible wheel.
I’m not opposed to the edible wheel.
Back in the 90s, we did the same to Neon. We bought a few, trying to figure out how Chrysler managed to sell them so cheaply. Nobody in the team felt any remorse.
But they suck when they freeze shut in the winter. You have to push the button in while pulling the handle out, so you’re applying two opposing forces at once. Not fun.
This door knob type is quite rare.
They always reminded me of the old Lincoln trunk locks
4x your share as in you park your beemer across 3 spots like all the others?
The Subaru Outback is the Toyota Camry of Station Wagons (in the US, because we don’t get the Camry wagon here)
The Toyota Camry of Buying a Luxury Car So That You Can One-Up Your Neighbors: the Lexus Es300 (Toyota Camry)
Toyota Camry of the sky: The Boeing 737
(Or should I include small private planes in the equation?)
Same thing as pulling the shifter out of gear, into neutral, and pumping the clutch pedal 2x before engaging reverse. :)
And I still want one!
“...inside jokes, in between spewing hate towards anything that doesn’t resemble a [BROWN] diesel stick shift Miata wagon.”
the notion of “fair and balanced” has led us down the path to “news” now meaning “people scream at each other from opposite ends of a spectrum, while ignoring everything between them.”
As CSI Miami tells us, anything can be solved with Photoshop and “ENHANCE!”.
The passengers likely requested it. Not that it would prevent them from suing anyway.
Yesterday was a freak show of thunderstorms all over the South. I have never had a lightning strike defeat a surge protector before, but my cable modem AND my Ooma Telo both got fried. Also, I regret to inform you that Delta was using my modem to run their flight network. I'll be taking the bad unit up to Charter…
While the gatling gun was first deployed by the US army (making such a thing an impossibility for the confederacy at any point in the civil war) it wasn’t first deployed until the battle of Petersberg that you mentioned, and the Army didn’t really accept them as a weapon system until after the conclusion of the war.…
I know that headline seems a little ridiculous: why were there no tanks in the Civil War? Most of you are likely…
working backwards from the sort of points you’ve made, they’d probably think that we drive four-wheeled cars, controlled by something akin to an organ console (to make maximum use of politely available appenages), that transmit all data (speed, indicators etc.) by a constant modulating hum (on account of the fact that…
A question a child might ask, but not a childish question