His light blue Islero was featured on a Jay Leno’s Garage episode. He didn’t seem very excited to own it. Maybe nonchalance is part of his image.
His light blue Islero was featured on a Jay Leno’s Garage episode. He didn’t seem very excited to own it. Maybe nonchalance is part of his image.
I wish more people felt that way, so I could eventually buy one. (Or at least drive one.)
I don’t want an 80 inch TV, and I don’t want a Honda CRV. I just don’t know if I want an 80's Sirocco. I loved these back then, but I’ve changed. People buy the new Lotus (for example) for that light car, light steering feeling. This is a cheaper experience, and will also better preserve my driver’s license.
That’s the most spacious basement I’ve ever seen! Lots of natural lighting as well!
I’m late to this conversation (December was BUSY!), and I can’t figure out why no one has mentioned that insurance on a sub-$4,000 car is a LOT less than a leased, $10,000++ vehicle. I sold two, good condition, 12 year old vehicles for $3,000 each, and the insurance on my brand-new, $22,000 car is more than both of…
Impulsive decisions are how we Americans are conceived!
We all know the back seats are there for insurance purposes and emergency transportation for drunk buddies.
In 10 years this will be on the NP or CP feature.
Probably used his flip phone camera. No pixels, shitty optics, terrible contrast, no field of view.
Higher beltlines of course being a symptom of SUVs and crossovers, which go right over the previous crash protection. Shorter vehicles will help reverse the problem.
Actually, Mazda gets points for consistency, there. They have a standard set of trim lines offered on all of their cars (not sure about the SUVs). They used to have an Economy trim, then Sport, then Touring, then Grand Touring. The features available on a “Sport” Mazda 3 match those on the “Sport” Mazda 5 and 6. And…
The previous sale listed “Trump Industries” as the owner, so I doubt Trump every owned that vehicle. He merely drove it.