montagr
Montagr
montagr

at what point does it just become a bad financial decision...and at what point does wrenching just become a pain in the ass

He sold the Baja Bug. This is a new and different bad decision.

You must be new here.

I’m just gonna come out and say it. There is no “Bad” looking Lamborghini. There are some that are crazy, some that are very indicative of their era, but none look bad.

Came here to post this.

Unfortunately it’s powered by diesel and has 3 open recalls on it.

*lifts battery pack cover*

At least it cuts to the chase and gets them out a head of the problem.

How unexpected. Up until now, their reputation was stainless.

Their commitment to fraud was ironclad. But at least somebody called the coppers.

I sure hope Japan’s industry has the metal to weather this storm.

Steel yourselves for a total recall.

They are overhyped, and no, they’re NOT going to happen. Nobody is going to pay the steep costs of owning an autonomous car. When I was selling new cars back in the 1990s, everybody loved the idea of having antilock brakes, but on models which still offered them as an option, very few people were willing to pay for

1st Gear: I would argue the biggest issue with electric vehicle startups isn’t necessarily the cost of entry, but the lack of potential profits at this time. Let me put it this way, how many years has Tesla turned a net-profit? Quarters? What about Chevy with the Bolt? Nissan with the Leaf?

You must deal with magickal fairy insurance companies. On the other hand, I have State Farm. I got backed into by a car exiting a street parking spot. I laid on the horn, and was at a dead stop when he backed out. Tore off the passenger side of my Saturn (it sounds like potato chips crunching). The repairs were done

My track friends have been telling me to make a YT channel of me wrenching on my car because “YouTube has 10 hour video limits now. That should cover your oil changes and maybe gear oil changes.”

That’s because as kids we are better at thinking as engineers do, rather than as marketing guys do.

I definitely remember being a kid and thinking that how high the speedometer went meant the top speed of the car.

Keystone Light?

“Researching torque ratios”