You’re not alone in this, Kevin.
You’re not alone in this, Kevin.
While I agree with the content of your post, I disagree with the tone and idea. Cars are uniquely personal and if Jason stuck with his this long, than by god it’s the car for him and I’m glad they fixed it.
Millennials live in large cities and don’t want to drive...anything.
Reminds me of this:
Fast and Furious 4: Notice anything missing from this STI when it rolls over?
LOL, you needed that much ground clearance? I did it in an F40 bro.
One word: handbrake
There are words in the article. They explain who made these drawings. It’s a pretty good read, too.
Too bad I can’t afford to live near where I work.
Here is Christian Von Koenigsegg in 1996.
Even more brilliant would be wearing shoes when you pour boiling water near your feet. But I'm not a mechanic so I don't know.
It’s kind of like driving a manual and kind of like driving an automatic. You don’t use a third pedal (duh), but there’s no torque converter so a) you can roll backward on a hill when stopped and b) there’s no mushy slop while waiting for converter lockup, however....it isn’t as smooth in stop and go stuff as a…
Don’t go in like a hothead and you get treated like a fellow human? What a novel concept.
“It is the official car for boyfriends pointing it out to their girlfriends when they see it on the street.”
“It is the official car for boyfriends pointing it out to their girlfriends when they see it on the street.”
The AE86 is nice but id rather have an 82-85 Supra
Actually, that sounds like the kind of interaction that I’d like to have with a dealership. If they couldn’t care less about the car, if I get it serviced (on the off chance that I will need to), I won’t have to worry about someone revving up the engine and joyriding.
I LOVE my Golf R’s DSG. I never thought I would say that, but the damn thing is fast and intelligent with its shifts.
You.......are wrong........
So have you driven a VW GTI with the DSG gearbox?