joshbailey
Josh Bailey
joshbailey

I think it depends on the state.

You should just ask them for the going rate to change out a bad radiator on your VW Beetle.

Was this one in Gran Turismo 2? I remember a racing modified van from that game.

I know mine was a 3rd gen, but I was just trying to say that not all Explorers were bad.

I can see it now.


They must talky be ramping up production of these. I live less than a mile from the plant and have been seeing them driving around a lot lately. I passed at least half a dozen on my way into work this morning.

I almost exclusively used the back glass instead of the entire hatch. My brother on the other hand uses the entire hatch and never opens just the glass. His '04 still hasn't experienced the crack.

I knew of a couple that had the issue, but mine never gave a hint of being troublesome. If I recall correctly mine was produced later in the model year. I did have the dreaded crack on the rear hatch.

What's with the hate for the Explorer? I currently don't have one, but I drove a 2003 Eddie Bauer 4x4 with the 4.6L V8 for nearly 7 years and 90k miles. I bought it with 55,000 on the odometer. It was an excellent vehicle with the only big issues being it requiring new wheel bearings at around 130,000 miles and brake

It's not better if the driver gets caught. However if it has a lower incident rate than a normal/sober/alert driver then it is better for everyone else.

I have good memories of learning to do animations and basic scripting back in an after school computer class in middle school. We were using Flash 5 at the time. This was sometime around 2001.

I am sorry, but I can not star you for many reasons. I too have custom ordered a car and waited 138 days for delivery of said car. In fact, I did not even have confirmation of whether or not the car would be built until less than a month before the actual build date. However, my order process went much differently.

Coutnerpoint is that Corvettes tend to change throughout their long model runs. In 2005 that Corvette had an LS2. By 2008 it was sporting an LS3. They also introduced ZO6, Grand Sport, and ZR1 models during that run which helped freshen up the car.

This is more reflective of street driving conditions. Therefore it represents what most people will experience when driving.

Turbo lag can mean one of two very different things.

In early days of turbos in the 80s and 90s turbo lag was mostly referring to the fact that turbo motors were very peaky with steep torque curves. They actually made less power and low RPMS and more power at higher RPMs.

In today’s world turbo lag can either refer to

I truly believe that the Vita memory card is a big part of what never allowed the system to really take off. One of the reasons I didn't get one is the price of the memory card. However, I can see a valid technical reason for using a proprietary card. The specs of the Vita probably allowed the games to stream data at

I love having the lift-off burbles.

I’ve heard a story about another team using undersized bolt heads on the restrictor plate to allow air to flow through the now existent gaps between the bolt head and the bolt hole.

I have a feeling that full time self-driving cars will be a technology that will consistently be ~5 years away. We are currently close and use aspects of the technology today, but we are nowhere close to 100% autonomy in all operating conditions that drivers currently deal with.

I remember seeing them in the EB games Sunday ad for like $30 (down from $200) and wishing I could get one. Only in the last 10 years did I realize that they were only that cheap because they were already discontinued.