moonlock
sloppyjalopy
moonlock

You’re not helping. All the hyperbole is disgraceful and is seriously harming your argument. Wake up and use your words.

Breathe...

Relax. You don’t get why we like this show and that’s fine, but there’s no need to be a dick. Regardless of any problems it has I and many others enjoy this show thoroughly.

Never cease to be amazed. Airplanes use their wings to fly, not their wheels. Complex, I know!!

>the phenomenon of “induced demand”—that is, if you build more road capacity, it’ll eventually become full once again—would make Musk’s idea futile

Yep, in one of the richest neighbourhoods on earth you can park a supercar on the street.

My first thought exactly. ‘Why is there a broken car in the parking lot?’

>The engine has very little leverage when it’s sitting in between the two fulcrum points.

In Montana there’s some great ones, stuff like no sheep in the passenger seat on a sunday or some shit...

He deseved a fair trial. And in my opinion he deserved to be convicted and punished severely. However, that punishment must be chosen by an impartial judge and carried out within the constraints of the law.

>This isn’t a rare skill. Every major city police department can do that, as can multiple city / county / state agencies across the US

>We are also assuming that all these cars will be new and clean. Which will be far from reality if you do not have somebody to monitor and clean the car after each ride.

>there are so many steps between here and there involving government regulations, insurance liability, infrastructure and the minor detail of a company being able to produce an autonomous vehicle

>To this date, autonomous cars have changed NOTHING

Think more long term. The general concensus is that we won’t own cars in the semi-near future. There will be fleets that service populations. Instead of parking your own car in your in your own garage and doing all charging, taking for regular service, etc., they will all live in a robot dormitory where they are

Fuck yeah. Nicely done. Seems like drifting is starting to progress pretty quick. I wouldn’t be surprised to see the 360 to drift is coming to tracks near you soon.

>uncharacteristically bad

It ain’t the meat, it’s the motion.

Closed cockpit is a much more controlled environment, and therefore an easier place to drive from. To have your helmet exposed to the wind on a back straight in an F1 car has got to feel pretty crazy. To then operate the gnarliest cars ever built (arguably, granted) in those conditions (rain!) is a test of a racer

Mullet Car.