mowter
Mowter
mowter

I dunno. An expert troll would have also included a mention of working “under the hood.”

I THINK I love BG&E? Honestly, it’s been so long now, I really don’t remember much about the actual game.

...a high-speed J-turn drift in a red Subaru WRX is particularly amazing.

Well done.

I dislike both.

Oh, and there should be a law mandating that every new car be available in that shade of blue.

At the recommendation of another reader, I will continue to pronounce “Polestar” such that it rhymes with “molester.”

My beef with definitions like that is twofold. First, a lot of these things are spectrums, so we’re still left without a clear line. Second, for off-roading, you don’t need much more than some flavor of 4WD and a bit of a lift.

I’m with you, man. The immersiveness of it was nice, and the Wiimote worked pretty well for shooting.

So can an SUV be unibody? I fear this conversation would end up becoming more philosophical than technical.

The Googles say that GC has never been body-on-frame. Durango used to be, but no longer is as of the current generation.

We’d have to read the report to be sure, but I suspect you’d find that (a) they didn’t evaluate the impact on other drivers/cars and (b) they did see a measurable advantage.

I’d be curious how many of these offered upgraded lights as an option. My guess is that manufacturers like to use upgraded lights as an upsell, even if it doesn’t really impact the cost.

Educate me. Which two are you counting? This is a body-on-frame thing, no?

In my ‘94 Grand Cherokee, I do recall one particular instance where the guy in the car in front of me was totally losing his stuff because he thought I was blasting my brights. Nope; that’s just my headlights, man.

What it boiled down to, the News reports, is the type of light source in a headlight;

Here in New York City, the transportation situation is so dire that the MTA is encouraging people to “stay home or work odd hours”

Unfortunately, the Jeep is being held by Nigerian customs officers until they receive the processing fee of $7,500.

...but the actual story could have provided some context for your headline.