loiseinhorn
Lois Einhorn
loiseinhorn

American muscle cars of the 60's and early 70s.

I’ll second this. As basic as electric transportation gets, not at all attractive and an interior only a psychotic could love. Yet it’s average owner thinks they are driving a Bugatti with Toyota quality and Jaguar looks.

Tesla Model 3. It has some weird halo effect despite being ugly and having a bargain basement interior... And that's before getting into the quality issues. It drives fine, it's fast, and electric... But since when does that get it a free pass when it also costs $50k?

For all the bullshit reasons cops pull people over, I wish they’d stop more folks with dangerous loads like this. I’ve seen old pickup trucks around here loaded with, and I’m not joking, about 20 full-size wooden pallets. Rear end of the trucks nearly dragging the ground with the damn things stacked 10 high and two

Goobers will say they need to haul their 69 full sheets of plywood at least 690 miles every day, in less than 6-9 hours, but I think this thing is great.  And I’m a car guy.

I’d argue that we have been @ peak muscle for about a decade. Throw out the Demon/Hellcat/GT500/ZL1 because those are way too god damn expensive to be a muscle car. You touch on this somewhat in the blog, but those deserve their own class of something like supermuscle.

1969

I see zero harm in offering it as an option. The majority of the owners are not driving these cars at 10/10ths and 99.98% of these m3s will never be on a track or doing any sort of formal racing. These are street cars first and people who live in cold climates have been more and more demanding awd on luxury cars.

If you watch the first video you can clearly see that the Hellcat continues to push the Silverado into the curb.  Hitting the curb caused the rollover.

Thank you for your incredibly condescending reply! I’m sure it is a truly incomprehensible concept, but we both have excellent credit, are in the process of signing paperwork on a house we purchased with more than the standard 20% down payment, and still had the money at hand for a goofy purchase like the Suburban. 

Wait, all these posts and not a single mention of the E63S?!

This is a good suggestion. Both the car and our new way of living. 

Lol, the thought hadn’t crossed my mind until now. You have to admit though that the Viper is a car that is always looking for a way to kill its occupants. Why settle for only wrapping you around an oak tree when it can also burn you to death while you sleep?

ehhh, if a Camry caught on fire and took out the garage and another car, then huge red flag. But a Viper trying to do it seems par for the course.

Rob,

“Seller reports that this is a recent acquisition, with few miles added under his care. Prospective buyers please note that only one set of keys will be included as the original dealership retained the other for evidence sentimental reasons.”