I lived in Scotland for a short time, and they were the same, exceptionally nice folk, as long as you weren’t English.
I lived in Scotland for a short time, and they were the same, exceptionally nice folk, as long as you weren’t English.
I just had to see for myself, so I went to the NADA site, and lo and behold, it actually does list high retail as $26,800. Average retail, however drops to $15,400, which still seems looney bin crazy to me.
The only exception being the full-size trucks. That was the one thing that the big 3 knew how to make right, because if they didn’t, they would lose a shit-ton of profit from fleet sales.
That curtain between classes is just not adequate...
Does this mean that Ireland is now Europe’s Florida?
TIL that the US is not the only country with inadequate mental health care.
That’s a good point. Once a new driver is 18+, I believe they just have to show up and take the test. And yeah, that is definitely a problem, especially for immigrants (e.g., New Yorkers) that have never been behind the wheel before.
My daughter is 15 and is getting her permit next week. In Texas at least, they have definitely increased the difficulty and require way more time behind the wheel before getting a license than when I got mine in the Eighties. Plus there are more limitations for minors driving even after getting a full license.
I was behind (fortunately!) a brand new Escalade last week. It is damn impressive how sharp the edges of the headlight beam are. I could see a perfect horizontal line cast on the trees as they went around curves. I would image coming at this guy cresting a hill would be absolutely blinding.
I think this explains their thought process...
Meh, the Tx tag is from 18 years ago. Rarer cars like Ferraris moving state-to-state over their 30+ year life span is no big deal. But why they left it on for 18 years? That is strange. Unless they were just afraid that removing it might make the cracked windshield worse.
True, but I’m not sure when something that could really be called a “network” was in use in cars versus just point-to-point communication. Since CAN stands for Controller Area Network, it is pretty easy to make the argument that it is a true network in a car.
Because the plants whose seeds are harvested to create the veggie oil are still alive and currently turning the CO2 produced by burning the oil back into O2, while the plant matter that was buried a million years ago hasn’t converted CO2 into anything in a million years.
Just squeeze the gas can during acceleration.
Alternate headline...