jpassiniemi
JPass
jpassiniemi

Full disclosure: This does not answer your question immediately.

My one Christmas tradition is to put a blue Hotwheels Jeep in the nativity scene. Once you collectively agree on car versions of the individuals involved, you can add a blue Jeep starring as itself (yes I bent the windshield on a slant when I was 7

I saw a Ferrari at a bus stop in the middle of winter in BC.

*please ungray me?

100% agreed that you never notice the cargo van - it’s a chameleon car but not quite the “perfect vehicle for anywhere”.
That title is more appropriate for the Suburban or Land Cruiser. Whether you’re picking up the kids, the president, your date or 1/2 a ton of lumber (or all of the above) these two will have you

Now playing

Jamiroquai - White Knuckle Ride.
Reason: Porsche 911 Carrera RS 2.7 thrashed in the desert.
*Ungray me please?

Opinion: How well a car was designed, built, used and maintained are more important than the number of times tires have rotated about their axis. However, distance is easier to measure than overall quality and generally things wear out as they are used. Therefore, I try to buy low mileage cars that I get to turn into

UAZ 452, Land Cruiser J76 and Suzuki SX4 because:
- minimal effort required to preserve
- minimal infrastructure required to operate
- purposeful without being overly boring

If current is flowing through a “perfect” conductor (i.e. one with no electrical resistance) there will be no voltage drop across any two points of the conductor. Voltage is a difference in potential energy per unit charge between two points, current is the flow of electrons through material and resistance is how hard

Up until now I thought there was a fairly simple science to this - red cars, loud cars and sporty/flashy looking cars always get get more attention from everyone including law enforcement. But here we have: