jamisparker
jamisparker
jamisparker

It also works really well. And is $30 at Costco

It also works really well. And is $30 at Costco

It works fine as long as you aren’t in an accident.

In fairness, they almost certainly would have screwed it up anyway.

There’s a discount code.

There’s a discount code.

A playground near my house is a gym.

I have one. Most parts aren’t bad, though a few are expensive. The engines and bodies have held up well, only issue is electrical gremlins.

Porsche 944 is even cheaper than a Miata and doesn’t need a thing to go on the track.

The Veloster comes to mind, but they are certainly not as common as they were in the late 90's.

I don’t recall what scene the car was displayed during, but the whole movie takes place on the Great Barrier Reef of Australia and the California coast.

No timing belt on a pushrod flathead.

Sweet! My fleet is clean.

Buy? Not too bad. Maintain? Haha, hoohoo, hehe, lol.

In my first-hand experience, a Shadow won’t even get you where you’re going.

Couldn’t they swap new powertrains into all the chassis? Seems less wasteful than just melting them, and probably cheaper.

That is what they originally proposed, but apparently it didn’t meet standards. Not too surprising that it was insufficient, it is hard to believe to such a simple fix would be enough or the would have done it in the first place.

I biggest reason for the cost difference is that VW can’t fix the cars. Every other recall we’re comparing to, there was a relatively inexpensive part that could be replaced, whereas VW is forced to buy back all the cars for thousands of dollars. The fines aren’t terribly disproportionate.

The Journey sells because it is the cheapest 3 row crossover by a pretty large margin. My sister-in-law got one, it spent a couple weeks at the dealer in the first year. No FCA for me.

I’m happy for the discussion. I’m an aspiring driver, and it is very informative to see people’s takes.