give-me-a-manuel-alpha-romero-you-cowards
give_me_a_manuel_alpha_romero_you_cowards
give-me-a-manuel-alpha-romero-you-cowards

Definitely, he didn’t seem to be over-dramatic about it, it was more Matt questioning the failure systems versus other by-wire systems that are deemed safe like on airplanes. While I’m not super tech-versed, the way he put it was that airplanes have both duplicate systems and secondary backups that work off of

I feel this. Almost all the garages in my neighborhood are 3-car, and most families have two cars since they don’t have driving age kids yet. I’m sure they get on fine with space, but with three cars it’s tough. Luckily we’ve got smaller cars, the longest being my wife’s Macan, so we can easily fit them all in. But

A few of these are stretching the “only sold for a single year” thing. I mean, first slide 1963 Corvette. the 1964 wasn’t a new generation, they just changed one design element. If that’s a qualifier to you, then my 1960 Impala was a one year only too since they changed the rear fins. So would the ‘58, ‘59, ‘61, ‘62,

Hell no, this is full-on crack pipe.

328d’s both sedans and wagons were auto only, no choice on that.

I don’t think we’re expecting it to be cheaper, we’re just expecting it to look better (subjective I understand) and have better interior quality especially when competitors are much nicer for a similar price.

I mean it’s not really hard to understand. Not only is the WRX pretty ugly as a sports sedan, but its price is creeping up there too. Plus, the auto is a CVT, and the top trim is CVT only, top trim available with a manual is the TR which doesn’t have a sunroof. Stupid optioning. Add to that the fact that Subaru has a

Yep, and there’s a great Smoking Tire podcast episode (can’t remember the specific guest) where the guest is a specialist in this kind of thing and explains in detail why the “failsafe” system in a Tesla isn’t actually an effective protection like they have in airplanes for their by-wire controls.

Except I don’t believe #1 is true. Most people THINK they want grayscale cars. Like I mentioned above I had numerous customers who gave me their list of wants, including color which was always black, white, or gray. After a few test drives, being wishy washy not able to come to a decision, they’d see one in an actual

That’s the thing, either they’ll incentivize you to take one you don’t really want, or you’ll have people coming saying “you don’t have a blue one that I want, what’ll you do for me on this black one instead?” Either way they’re making less money. And now with actual inventories people are less willing to wait for an

I do put some of the blame for grayscale sports cars on car manufacturers, but mostly on dealers honestly. Carmakers have a lot of power in setting trends. What have some of the color trends been on sports cars? Murdered out (made easy by blackout trim from the factory), matte black, and non-metallic grays like

It’s not about age, the point is you’re comparing everything against basically the absolute best shifters ever made. It’s fair to say a Koenigsegg is the best car ever made. However, it’s unfair to say a BMW M3 is “disappointing” because it’s not a Koenigsegg. Good or bad should be based on the average, not compared

The article made it sound like it was EV only, and only the rally version is gas. Plus the talk that Lancia was going all-EV much sooner than most brands.

I don’t think we really hated the Supra. I certainly don’t. The problem is, at that price point, it’s a stretch for people who would really buy them. If someone’s wealthy enough to buy one as a second/third/fourth car toy, it’s competing with the A80 along with prestige brands like Porsche. It’s gotta be doable as a

Wait until you meet BMW fans...

That’s kind of an unfair comparison though. Like saying a Panamera has disappointing driving dynamics after owning a 911. The GTI’s manual isn’t great but it’s not bad by any means. I had a BMW 335 manual and test drove a MK8 GTI as a replacement. Shifter was about as good, clutch slightly worse, but that’s also

Me too. I mean I absolutely hate Hyundai so I’d never own one, but I do like the look and concept. If it was a Mazda I’d have one already.

Was going to say the same thing. Residuals are going a lot lower not only on Stellantis but on a lot of cars. I actually just leased my Giulia a month or so ago not because I actually wanted to lease but because the rate was so much lower than a finance and so the low residual was actually a good thing in my situation.

The ACC on my Giulia lets you get pretty close, close enough that if I’m coming up on someone going a lot slower I’m always about to brake myself. Cool thing on a lot of the sportier cars too is it’ll accelerate back up to speed harder if you’re in sport mode.