mrbaits
mrbaits
mrbaits

Oh, and I should mention the seller is asking $30,000 for this thing, a price which must mean that if you looked right into the seller's eyes, you'd actually see spirals, a side effect of the rampant, full-blown bonkersism that's ravaging this poor bastard's body and mind. Also, one of the pictures has a scary-looking

At least they are willing to make RWD performace coupes and sedans, unlike Lincoln.

It's not a slushbox, it's an automatic of the S-tronic double clutch variety.

Where have you seen any early GT-R's depreciating like used kleenex? KBB has the private sale value of a good condition 2009 GT-R with 50k miles at $57,ooo, that is 81% of it's original price. Most cars would have lost 40% or more of their value in that same amount of time.

The Altima coupe was new for 2008, there were no Altima coupes turned in for cash for clunkers. A 3rd gen sedan perhaps?

I agree. I think many of the comments here have mistaken the question to be US airports, not the world over. Honestly Atlanta isn't that bad compared to a few others listed. I'd much rather connect in ATL than LAX, except the destination is probably much nicer if I have to connect at LAX.

I see what you meant now. For a minute I thought you posted you were sure the dealership took copies of the ID's. Maybe you were right and the copies were right there with the keys and ID's, but then if the copies were already made it seems like they would have given the ID back at that point. Who knows, it's

No, the article states "when the employee got up, they took the keys and their ID's and left." I assume this means the salesperson was going to make a copy and probably have them sign some form or something and they took the opportunity when nobody was looking to leave with their ID's and car key. This must have

Where are you getting a sub 5 second 0-60 time for the 6MT? C&D who generally has among the faster test times put it at 5.2, dead even with the G37.

I'm pretty sure when the first G35 came out that became the 4DSC. I always struggled with calling a FWD car a sports car.

In the case of the new Q50, a gear engages in the case of electrical failure that allows the steering to be controlled manually.

Or perhaps, the consumers who choose this technology know they are more prone to accidents, which is why they choose them.

As mentioned already, use Chrome with Adblock. I didn't see the ad.

I wouldn't have recommended any convertible as a good dog car for the simple reason that your dog can easily jump out at first sight of a cat or squirrel. The Winton gets a pass on this however, it likely could not have traveled much faster than the dog could run on it's own anyway.

I started looking at pricing for an EVO the other day, by the time you load it up, you have a car that has a suggested price of around $45 grand. For that price there are a lot of nicer cars to be had, and it would be hard to swallow for what is essentially a nice Lancer.

I'm surprised i had to scroll down as far as I did before someone mentioned the Lancer.

Unfortunately there does actually seem to be a lot of irrational nissan/infiniti hate around here. I'm still trying to figure out why.

I don't really know how much a deflated balloon weighs, but if you perch too much weight over that single back wheel, that thing will tip right over when turning.

The lambo's speed was definitely a contributing factor. The other driver probably saw him, saw how far away he was and thought he could make it, not realizing that distance was not enough at the speed at which it was travelling. It was definitely the other cars fault but the accident probably wouldn't have happened

Power windows, power door locks and the like were once considered "technological gimmicks" by the last generation of Luddites too.