mitchkelleher
Mitch Kelleher
mitchkelleher

He apparently has no idea how much the trial defense and sentence would have cost him had the kid died (he obviously doesn’t care about the kid, so I’m ignoring guilt or other emotional cost that a human would feel). I love my car, too, but if someone had to cause some damage to it to save the life of even a stranger,

yeah, they get compared because they’re really the only two cheap sports cars left, but they’re about as far apart as cars can be in that rather narrow category. I have a GR86 and have never had much interest in a Miata whatsoever (I love that they exist and what they did for sports cars, it’s just not for me as it’s

It’s also largely a Subaru platform. It’s really mostly Subaru even though it seems Toyota pushed for it. Subaru seems completely disinterested in selling them.

I lucked out. Ordered it as soon as the configurator went live, dealer that I had no prior relationship with called me, and I put down a deposit not expecting to maybe see a car in six months. Six weeks later, I got exactly what I was looking for at MSRP, which was barely more than a Corolla hatch if you could even

The twins ride remarkably well and the driving position feels roomier than some bigger cars. With the folding seats, it fits a lot more crap than I expected. Biggest problem with that is loading due to the shape and size of the trunk opening.

Better midrange torque (or just no dip in it) would be welcome, but I trust that overstressed little engine even less than the FA24D and I’m no fan of AWD (I even prefer FWD—though not in a sports caras my 3 former Subarus that were FWD drove much better than their AWD mates while getting better mileage and having no

Dur, you stupid luddite, we can obviously trust steer-by-wire because hur dur airplanes.

“But I still live my truck, thanks, Elon!”

Try explaining it to the average moron while they insist on attempting it. I tried a few times over the years and they obviously thought they knew better even though their lack of success and what they must know is a deficit of automotive knowledge should tell them they’re on their back foot, so now I leave them to

That was a pretty good one.

That’s what I thought. I would think this would be crossing against the light, not jaywalking, but maybe there’s no distinction.

My guess is the height of the hood might have something to do with it. Vehicle impacts in shoulder area and force of the hit throws body forward while unimpacted head tries to remain stationary? Tall hood also wouldn’t help visibility. Same with loss of a head, but that’s at the bottom of the list of problems at that

This is a late reply, but one thing that I didn’t see mentioned in a scan of other comments is also the feel of quality. A Corolla effectively does what a Rolls Royce does (better if measuring as a simple car), but the feeling of quality is vastly different, making simple operations like flick of a switch a small joy.

Most of the time, that was because the rear wheel well cut into the door, not leaving enough internal space for full retraction. Some cars would have the glass pivot down farther at the leading edge to get a little more drop while the rear would stick up. To the uninitiated, it looked like the window track had failed.

Not me. Don’t like tall (though it’s not a disqualifier), don’t like slender in its usual form used to describe runway models who are rail-thin and shapeless, and I don’t prefer blondes or really pale skin. Growing up in the anti-ass, silicone-chest ‘80s, I didn’t really understand the bikini posters of nearly flat hip

It’s just about perfect for the job. Getaways aren’t generally like the movies and if they get to that point, things went bad and you’re likely getting caught, plus we’re talking a crowded city, so a fast car’s acceleration and top speed are almost worthless. A motorcycle would be faster, but these things are

Yeah, while I agree that car-centric infrastructure contributes to the problem, suburban sprawl has been a thing for decades. I think the relatively recent rise of social media and ubiquitous connectivity with its addictively constant information scrolling combined with FOMO (ironic as people miss out when they are on

I know my neighbor! He’s in a cult started by some former white collar criminal who stole $16M or something like that, but hey, they have some E-list actor from Dawson’s Creek in it! I’m glad he’s a 1/4 mi. driveway away.

Seen 3 or so (same one, 2 or 3 times, who can tell?). They’re even wavier looking in person than I expected (maybe they’ll be identifiable by their panels’ particular waves, kind of like the unique markings on a whale). Looks like an old B-movie sci-fi prop—maybe one of those original Star Wars knockoffs—but not in a

For me it’s obnoxious safety nannies of highly dubious benefit to anyone doing the bare minimum of paying attention and common false activations or failures to work (see recent IIHS EAB tests) that make the car less safe and also cause vehicles to sometimes be totaled for minor collisions due to lack of parts/expense;

Real OEMs can’t seem to program fucking e-throttles to not lag and we’re trusting a shitbag company like Tesla to do steer-by-wire correctly? This garbage should be illegal. Benefits are virtually none (and nothing that matters) with very high potential for serious consequences in the event of easily foreseen failure