Drive the car and you won’t care what it’s called.
Counterpoint: They were grossly too expensive to being with, so I just see it as $50k of depreciation and $20-30k margin grab taken off. I can’t imagine the margins on just upping the output of an electric motor through software. You could get an almost mechanically identical Audi RS etron GT for $150k (which was also…
The body shell says “BMW” but the innards say “Chevette”. ND.
I care, because it makes it that much funnier.
There’s no level of cringe that the Muskrat wouldn’t stoop down to, so I wouldn’t be surprised if it is really him.
Straight out of the Trump playbook. ‘John Barron’ I believe was DT’s alter ego.
I can’t own one as long as Jeep pays my paychecks, but I really hope this thing knocks it out of the park, and forces Stellantis and Ford to adjust thier lofty pricing on the Wrangler and Bronco.
Likely, but you are going to have to open you your wallet a TON to get a tune on an Bentley.
They are all horrid. Porsche came to (or stayed in) their senses. Does make you wonder what mystery brew of drugs the designers were on at the time.
You know what really stands out about this list? These cars all felt very different to drive or even ride in. Each car and even each manufacturer had its own character. You could actually feel, see, and hear different sensations and it was all over the map. You would certainly know if you were in an ‘80's CRX vs. an…
Orange stain? Sounds like the new “presidential model.”
No, the Montero and the Dodge Raider were definitely in the US in the 80s competing with the Isuzu Trooper.
Del Taco is definitely superior, especially in the breakfast burrito department. It was a bit of a drive, but used to go the only local one for the Macho breakfast burrito (grim but fun fact: I was eating one as hangover food while 9/11 was unfolding). Then it closed down suddenly, along with the gas station it…
Del Taco is like Taco Bell, but with actual flavor and real shredded cheese. Hopefully, they’ll build one nearer to me, as it’s quite a ways and I have to pass multiple Taco Bells every time I go there.
The story of the Shaka reminds me of my first every safety lecture.