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

I did drive one hard once, we had a Gen 3 I think on the lot for sale and I took it out for a quick shakedown before customers came to see it. Like I mentioned above they’re light, which is where the relatively high limits come from, but there’s no composure or steering/pedal feel, which makes even a spirited drive

Very cool car, I’ve gotten to drive a couple of these very short distances and it’s a wonderful powertrain. Shame on that ebay motors generic rear wing though, it really doesn’t fit the car and is not something you want to see on something so low mileage it could be collectible.

Never said they don’t have their place, just that it’s not in any way a fun car IMO. And the original point was they’re hated because they got to be a status symbol for people acting as if they were doing the world a favor by driving a boring car because it was efficient.

Porsche is right but also incredibly hypocritical at the same time.

If you get fun out of hypermiling, great, but just because someone doesn’t like that doesn’t mean they only care about 0-60 times. I’ve driven every generation of Prius except the first and current, and to me they feel like the epitome of appliance. The trim is thin to keep everything lightweight, the gas engine

Jay Leno had a quote on about the Prius about a decade ago that sums it up perfectly. I’m paraphrasing because I can’t remember it exactly but basically Prius owners act like martyrs because they gave up driving something that’s even a little bit interesting to drive in order to save the environment.

Honestly every EV should be leased, and it’s also the reason why manufacturers are hesitant on them.

I know ‘80s lower end cars like this are a blind spot to me, but this just looks like a stretched Cavalier convertible IMO. It may be a bit distinct as a hatch, but the notchback and the convertible don’t look at all unique. Other than being coachbuilt, is there anything really special about this or the 200sx in

There’s one thing about this case that’s weird to me, the fact that she only wanted to apply at two banks. I get that some people don’t realize that multiple finance applications for the same thing in a short time period basically only constitute one hit on your credit (and inquiries is such a small portion of your

I don’t think it starts out as a scam, more just the dealer trying to churn and burn. When I sold cars we either made people wait or leave and come back because no paperwork was being signed before the approval came through, but I know there are some higher volume dealerships that don’t want to do that and just get

Challengers: I don’t go to a whole lot of car shows, but when I do go to a general one (no specific age, mfr, etc.) there’s always a line of Hellcats and Demons that look exactly the same with different colors owned by dudes with bulging arms in too small shirts and too short shorts. I don’t like to yuck anyone’s yum

I may be biased but how is it not the best looking 4-door out there under $100k? No busy design crap of the BMWs and Mercedes, nice side profile with long hood, short rear, unique front end, incredible wheels, and really good color options. They’re not that common so seeing one other than in passing or in photos is

I’m only 30 but I know I sound like an old man sometimes with this kind of stuff. I hate the capacitive controls everywhere today, but I do come from a background of cars that had the latest tech at the time so I can take to learning most things pretty quickly, understand the intended motions, and use them correctly

A lot of these weren’t all that bad, just hard trim and a boring design. The upmarket cars like the Buick and Cadillac certainly weren’t going to earn any new customers, but people loyal to the brand would buy them because it’s what’s available from the brand in their segment.

I know the older ones had different modes like save and charge so you could either keep or build up your battery charge for city driving, I’m sure they still have it in the new ones.

I still watch even the more recent ones regularly. James was on the Smoking Tire podcast this past week and was saying that their scripts are pretty much up in the air and a lot of is planned like only the day before. So a lot of their banter is pretty spontaneous. And while some of the pranks got a bit repetitive

Don’t go for the QF Giulia, just get a regular one. You can find them pretty loaded off lease CPO for under $30k and you still get 280 hp and over 30 mpg on the highway. 

Is there even a question? At least under $100k the best looking car by a mile is the Alfa Giulia.

Depends on the manufacturer. My older Corvette has auto-down only, and you have to hold slightly more than a tap to get it to go partially down which is annoying. But our other cars have detents, halfway for manual and all the way for auto up/down. If you have one of those it’s not that hard.

Just looked up the info on the legislation: