Or, alternatively, for $89k you could get three 10 year old CTS-V’s that have 6 more horsepower and 1 more pedal.
Counterpoint: The MKIV Supra had 20 hp more than a Corvette of the same year. This Supra has 120 hp less.
Silver lining take: It makes me more happy as the quantity of 400+ hp cars on the used car market gets bigger and cheaper every year.
I think the better route would be to only ship the car with no radio, no a/c, race pads that squeal and heim joints instead of bushing that require regular servicing.
Agreed... The MKIV was never a looker, but if a car is good enough it’s ugliness becomes an endearing trait.
If I was looking for a dedicated ice fishing rig and had $10k to blow, I’d be looking at these... They float, so breaking through the ice would be a non-event.
Elise WOULD be the perfect answer if the car wasn’t going to live in a Florida, a state known for it’s straight, flat roads... the antithesis of the environment the Elise was designed for.
Your entire body is under 10 psi if you go 23 ft under water, which is survivable by pretty much anyone.
It’s a bid to increase tourism. Nobody wants to go to a place where you’re more likely to be killed by spiders than die in a car accident, and it’s a million times easier to just increase the traffic fatalities than it would be to kill all the spiders.
From looking at the map, I find it odd that there’s apparently more ride hailing app drivers driving across Lake Michigan than New Mexico.
Uhhh... In physics world, the pressure a tire puts on the ground is equal to the air pressure inside the tire, meaning a tire with 10 psi exerts no more than 10 psi on the ground no matter how much weight it’s supporting.
I’d say only first and second gen Vipers.
I think that’s only true in physics world, where there’s no such thing as aerodynamic drag or frictional loss, and tires can expand or contract like balloons.
Possibly, but you’d be back to square one after the youths get a hold of them and start hellaflushing them.
Are we sure those aren’t bottom tier cars with top tier bumper covers and wheels instead of top tier cars with bottom tier badges?
I’ve done it once on the street, accidentally, with a bike. I was going through northern Kentucky on a weekend trip and taking the twistiest, hilliest, most convoluted route to my destination I could find.
Agreed. My DD is a 2015 Tacoma, and it has the most intrusive stability control of any vehicle I’ve ever owned or driven.
Toyota Rav4 or used school bus.