But let’s really, really think about what that “something more” actually is: in America, the 1955 to 1957 Chevy Bel Air has become the default, basically generic, “classic car.”
But let’s really, really think about what that “something more” actually is: in America, the 1955 to 1957 Chevy Bel Air has become the default, basically generic, “classic car.”
That photo of everyone stopped reminds me of Cannonball Run where everyone is waiting for the road construction to be completed.
The concept PT has some seriously weird curves; its roof/a-pillar is slated strangely as well. Personally i still like the PT cruiser, boring sure but a nice looking car.
Tesla, always finding new ways of causing accidents.
Also of interest is the ‘356 in an A’ blog.
I can understand the mistake, they’re both Nissans after all. Too bad she ended up driving the ugly Nissan.
I figure she noticed, and Tok advantage of what she viewed as a happy accident.
I figure she noticed, and took advantage of what she viewed as a happy accident.
If you are thrifty you would do half the stuff yourself, get inexpensive eBay parts, and only use the mechanic for harder things.
No one who is thrifty buys a $300 car without considering the cost of repairs.
You were too busy generalizing. :-D
If you pay a shop to do regular, non specialized work, you aren’t thrifty. Thrifty people do the work themselves; it’s in the job description.
If someone wants a show car and can't/won't do the work themselves, they will start with a nicer example.
Ok, so what you said is correct. It’s a ~$2500 car for someone who has to make it mint and won’t do any work themselves. For everyone else, its a $1000 car.
Just further evidence that self-driving cars are going to turn against us, Maximum Overdrive style.
Bring on the Ford Fusion Cross-Tour.
Kind of late for Cars and Coffee.
The Goatse-Racing-Concept really should seek medical help for its prolapsed sphincter.
It sure is dazzling.
When I bought my R50 Pathfinder the windows were really slow to roll up; really seemed like I would need to replace some window motors. Instead I used Simple Green and Q-Tips to clean out the window tracks, and then spritzed in some silicon lubricant in the tracks. Now the windows “roll” up and like they should. Just…