kevinrhodes
Kevin Rhodes
kevinrhodes

Tavarish does point out that it is about 1/2 price - though I have no clue as to the market for these, no interest in them at all. I agree that is about the right place to be on a freshly rebuilt car, and the two salvage title cars I have owned were priced at that level. One was an accident, the other a theft

Exactly my point. ABS is intended to allow you to have maximum braking while still allowing you to steer the car. But the reality is most drivers DON'T try to steer, they just mash the pedal and pray. But ABS still helps, in that at least you will then hit whatever you are going to hit straight on allowing for maximum

ABS doesn't really prevent that many accidents. Most people are too clueless to do more than stomp the pedal and shut their eyes. But what it does do is a decent job of ensuring the car hits straight on rather than sideways, allowing the other safety features to do a better job.

The advancement of emergency medicine gets a fair share of the credit too.

Way overbuilt, as most things were back before computers allowed you to shave everything down to the last necessary ounce. And not all that cheap adjusted for inflation - the Minor was not really an econobox, more like a 1950s British Camry. A middle-class family car. And you still find very few of them still around,

Part of the trick is you have to start with a decently built car, not one built as cheaply as possible. You don't find many cheap econoboxes from any era after 50 years. Usually they are cars that got put in storage when nearly new, or the proverbial little old lady drove it to church on Sunday cars.

Toyota I can buy as legendarily reliable. Subaru?? HAHAHAHAHAHA! I think there is a LOT more Subaru in the Toyobaru than there is Toyota. Which is both a good and a bad thing.

Is it really that much bigger than a Golf? More Jetta wagon sized? I have only seen one in passing, looked pretty small. The Q5 is not exactly vast inside.

'16 M235i (on order), '11 328i wagon, '01 Range Rover HSE, '74 Triumph Spitfire, just sold a '13 Fiat Abarth to make room for the M235i, depending on weather or mood. And 40+ rental cars a year (for the past 20 years or so) due to work travels, including way more than my fair share of these rolling turds. Thankfully

Which should not be done until AFTER you have negotiated the price of the new car. And I refuse to waste my time negotiating in person on the price anyway, that is why Dog invented e-mail. My car buying process is an initial scheduled appointment to get any questions I have answered and a test drive if needed. Then

While I think this behavior is abhorrent and inexcusable on the part of the dealership, the sad reality is that when you walk into a dealership you are instantly judged as to whether you are worth the sales persons time. To avoid this, I nearly always make an appointment when I am interested in looking at a car. It

BMW is the same. Right now they have some big push on evidently, as my last service visit generated several e-mails and two phone calls to ensure that I gave them all 10's on the survey.

What does it do that a Golf R won't do for ~1/2 the price? Impressing valets does not count.

What they will have is a loud crap car that rides badly and still handles badly.

The Internet Panther Love utterly baffles me. These cars are complete and utter crap on wheels. They don't go, they don't stop, they don't turn. They get terrible gas mileage for something so slow. They have no room inside considering they are the size of a small ocean liner. The ride is nausea inducing even on the

I can afford one, have owned Alfas in the past and loved them, and the lack of that third pedal kills my interest stone dead. So close and yet so far...

I've owned two salvage title cars and never had the slightest difficulty or even a question about it with insurance. And my state has no particular rules about salvage titles, other than the car has to pass an annual safety inspection just like every other non-antique car in the state. Complete non-issue, and I made

Shops and tire sizes gets ridiculous. My Range Rover came with 255/65-16s on it, which are not a factory size for that truck. I wanted to get 235/75-16 snow tires put on for winter (already had them from my previous Jeep, within 1-2% on circumference) . No, we can't do that, they are too narrow for that truck per our

I am impressed by the fact that not only does it LOOK like an old school bus, it sounds just like one and has similar acceleration too!

Could be worse, in my '11 BMW wagon the lighter socket is vertical up under the glovebox, directly above the passengers left foot. WTF were they thinking!?! Otherwise, the interior is a masterpiece, but that one is just baffling. And it was in the usual place in the pre-facelift cars.