I agree. Personally I’d love a hybrid version of my F150 with the 2.7 ecoboost. It’s already fast, and efficient for a truck, so a couple more city mpg would be nice.
I agree. Personally I’d love a hybrid version of my F150 with the 2.7 ecoboost. It’s already fast, and efficient for a truck, so a couple more city mpg would be nice.
Diablo I and II with all the expansions for mobile would have been a nice nostalgia hit without causing as much rabid hate, methinks.
Yes, but most people who live in cities don’t buy trucks.
I build a lattice of bacon over the turkey, then butter that. Bacon Turkey has gotten me elected to turkey cooker for the rest of eternity for my extended family. Bonus, the crumbled up bacon goes into the gravy at the end.
The king is arrested, long live the maybe-free-soon independent companies of Renault and Nissan.
And here’s my biggest question: how do I get over my fear of slipping and sliding?
When I lived in Pennsylvania I would have murdered someone for a Whataburger.
Man that burger looks gigantic
Right?!
Funny, the only one near me I stopped eating at in 2005 because of food poisoning. I’m sure it’s fine now...but there’s a Burger King 2 blocks down the street, and a Whataburger across from that...so...why bother.
Sign up for Jack in the Box’s newsletter to score a free medium curly fry with the purchase of a large Coke from 11/16 to 11/18.
You were better off at the Red Robin. Yum.
Lordy, I’d buy that in a heartbeat.
Wait, people still go to malls?
You’d be right. I’d say easily 50% of the trucks that come through our dealer have never had a hitch put on them, and of the other 50%, about half are used to tow less than 5 times a year.
Truth. I may buy one, if the manual version is cheap enough.
So there will be DOUBLE the number of trucks available with a manual once this comes out, assuming Chevy doesn’t kill the option in the Colorado before then. Nice.
I definitely need some MOPAR ratchet straps.
It would hold my kayak just as well as my F150 does.
“There’s a niche of SUV and pickup owners who don’t need a bed for hauling rocks and lumber.”