Insurance covered mine. I’d say it’s time to look for another plan.
Insurance covered mine. I’d say it’s time to look for another plan.
Most car buyers want autonomy. Most think it’s already available. Most are fools to believe the hype and to trust any of today’s available systems.
I like the interior too. It’s the exterior that looks bad. And before I'll go back for another Civic the Si needs to come in hatchback style. I need the exra space.
It looks better in the movie from top gear.
First thing I thought of when I saw GT is that thing will never hold my golf clubs. Then I saw the picture and couldn’t help but think whatever you do, don’t slam on the brakes. I guess it’s better than having to put your clubs in the passenger seat like the rest of the McClaren line, but it’s not really a car to take…
I get at least three letters every week asking if I want to sell my Florida home. It’s ramping up not down.
Nice to see you accept defeat with such grace. ROFL
Lol...I never said they weren’t. You assumed that from what I did say which was you get a new battery with a new car and used batteries with a used car. You tried to say there was no difference and I have proven that incorrect. The diferences may not be glaringly obvious or worth worrying much about, but they are…
Lol...the phrase this problem is semi-settled by is called implied multiplication by juxtaposition and it says the answer is 1
lol...Tesla says it’s batteries will retain 90% capacity after 160k miles. Nissan says theirs will degrade 15% after 60k miles though most users have found they do better than that. They degrade. Period. And misuse can speed that process. Also, extreme cold or heat can cause damage to any battery pack. I’ve done the…
Again, all that means is the owner took good care of his batteries. Something that you can NOT rely on when buying a used vehicle. Also, the article doesn’t mention how much range was lost over those 600k miles. Cabs don’t necessarily need to use their full capacity every day. I know when I drove one for awhile after…
But it’s not in an equation solver. It is typed out. And being typed out, you must assume that the slash is the equivalent of the proper division operator and follow PEMDAS:
Now that simply isn’t true and the length of time a battery will last depends on more than just the technology used. How it is cared for also comes into play. There’s a reason Tesla recommends you do not charge up to 100% all the time. It shortens battery life. While car battery packs last far longer today than they…
And you didn’t mention that with this, you get brand new batteries. With the off lease cars you don’t.
That’s what I said. Excel is wrong. It’s a known fault. When using the slash to indicate division, you need to calculate the equation on the right first to get the right answer.
It does exactly that. Excel fails to follow the multiplication before division rule for implied math. That is something anyone who works with the program enough has found to be irritating.
Excel is wrong. First, it would error and force a change to the equation before it could operate. It does not recognize implied math. And second reference: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Order_of_operations:
I’m guessing it’s more relavant than one of the electives I took. But scuba diving probably isn’t a big thing there. Lol