ironparachute
ironparachute
ironparachute

yea I'm actually very okay with this never coming to the US

Jeep Renegade in American Flag livery

AWD, Good on Gas, Inexpensive, and plenty of room for packages.

A plymouth Breeze/Chrysler Cirrus in Hungary? Neat. Awful cars but...Neat.

great. shoot me an email at jason@jalopnik.com and we'll arrange our first guest-curated taillight quiz.

HELL YES! On both counts :)

Thanks so much! I'll correct the spelling of your name right now. Do you still keep up your skill? Want to make a guest Taillight Quiz?

Watch this kid ID those taillights — those physical, disembodied taillights — like a badass while being timed and on national television. Captain Sweater there doesn't break a sweat and only has to come back to one Volvo light. I'm sorry to say I haven't been able to confirm the spelling of this Taillight Savant's

No problem. I just called my time guy, and he's credited you with seven new minutes, to be implemented on March 16, 2015. You'll get them at 5:41 pm, and they'll end at 5:48 pm. I added the extra two minutes as my way of apologizing for all the suffering you've undoubtedly been through. Hang in there; we'll get

Man, homemade Soviet cars is a limitless and fascinating sidebar to automobile history. They made all sorts of contraptions. There's a good gallery of them on this dumb website:

Here's one for sale in my hometown. Just needs some "engine work."

I owned a Saturn sedan at the time and I really wanted one of these. The primary reason is, because they were making them primarily for the Japanese market (the postal thing was a handy side venture) there were a huge list of improvements made to the cars to meet Japan's standards. I think there were 175 changes

That seems to follow the same idea as the postal Subaru, except with less hoon potential.

*Saturn "Quality" and "Value"

The USPS apparently experimented with hydrogen fuel cell vehicles, including FCV Equinoxes.

Not such a weird vehicle in and of itself, but the 1967 Ambassadors that AMC built for USPS were certainly different from the purpose-built trucklets they use today. Nearly 4000 right hand drive Ambassadors were sent to the post office that year, a sizable portion of the total output.

do "rural" routes count? Cause we have just about /any/ vehicle as a USPS car. The latest I saw was a late 90s/early 2000s Buick Century. o.O

And who could forget the runner up: