flyingstitch
flyingstitch
flyingstitch

Another one with the creepy shiny seats, like that Crossfire a couple of weeks back. Who do they think they’re fooling?

I dunno, it’s kind of a Star Wars rebel aesthetic–the grubby, dinged-up spaceship. For the money I could live with it, as long as the rust isn’t too bad.

In a weird way, this is like one of those old yet showroom-fresh-looking compact pickups. It’s so practical, it begs to be your DD. But it’s so beautiful, and every mile you add diminishes the value and exposes it to all the potential indignities of DD life, from door dings in the parking lot to getting T-boned by a

I gave it a conditional NP, contingent on the engine confusion being an innocent mistake. I also don’t know the relative merits/demerits of the two mills. But this truck’s condition and adornments tell me it has likely never been pushed close to its full capacity; in other words, as lightly used as anything can be with

Sometimes, “someone else’s vision” is just as ND as “someone else’s project.” This may be built and maintained to a exquisite standard, but it’s still done to someone’s very specific taste. Unless you have some cosmic soul connection with the seller, it’s going to be meaningless.

Looks lovely, but depreciation is still a thing, no matter how lovingly it’s been maintained. This isn’t and never will be a collector car. ND.

I’m morbidly curious to time travel and be in the room as they devised this scheme. Was it “Mwahahaha” or was it sterile, coded corporatespeak about retention and friction and such? Fascinating to contemplate.

We all know how this works. The buyer doesn’t compensate the seller for the work put into the truck. The seller, on the other hand, accounts for the cost of sourcing a new tailgate when (or before) the existing one devolves into reddish dust. ND.

Sometimes. I keep some around for those rare cash-only situations, and when I have a fresh $20, I try to break it so I have smaller denominations.

Unfortunately, today most cashiers just hand you a wad of moist bills with your coins in the middle of the pile. Arrrgh!!

Like a lot of GM designs from this era, the Reatta feels like a good idea that was rushed to production before it had time to fully ripen. Still, it’s unique and pretty nice, and you might be hard pressed to find a better example. NP.

It’s a runner, NP. I’m not sure I completely trust the seller’s stewardship of it, but I’ve learned from experience that a car well maintained early in life can often survive some missteps by a later owner and still be a solid citizen.

As a lifelong NJ resident until 4 months ago, I only recently had self-service become the default method of filling up. My vote goes to the people who leave their car at the pump while they do a 10-minute shopping expedition in the Kwik-E-Mart. It happens occasionally even in NJ, but seems more common in the self-serve

Note that there’s not a single unadulterated American flag.

I’m conflicted. It has some of the rough edges and odd details you might expect in a prototype, but it doesn’t look like a backyard hack job. Still, how hard could it be to confirm? Were there any kits like this? I gave it a highly contingent NP, because if the story is true, this would be a very cool piece of history

I've never been sold on this design, but I appreciate the love for it. This one looks pretty well sorted, so NP. 

This feels sketchier than a da Vinci notebook. The map in the ad centers roughly on a major hospital, which you may need after you wake up missing a kidney. Do I need to say ND?

I went pretend crazy with my pretend money. Couldn’t this be a future collectible? The style has aged well, it’s an objectively good car, and it would be a modest investment to bring it back to fully original if you’re fussed about that. Contrarian NP.

Is it just me, or did we hear what might be the sound of body panels flexing? 

This would remind me too much of my ‘86 Chevette, which was also white with the same color interior, and also had ‘80s GM build quality. ND.