I like this better than the AMG-GT. It has its own look, rather than stealing lines from everything from Jaguars to Caymans.
I like this better than the AMG-GT. It has its own look, rather than stealing lines from everything from Jaguars to Caymans.
The Ferrari is timeless, unique in most places. and, IT'S A FERRARI!
There's a downvote button here somewhere. I know there is, and I will find it.
The F355 only has a few weak areas, but they are doozies. This is the last car I'd ever recommend that someone buy because "Wow, it's cheaper than a Honda!"
Hasn't the whole country been in the doldrums for something like twenty years now? What do you see as the best strategy for recovery, if not Abe's approach? (I don't know what "right wing" means in a Japanese context... those terms tend to be locally meaningful but not globally.)
Which is the last place where anyone expects you to go full Richard Perle. Either own it fair and square, or put up a rhetorical smoke screen, but don't change your mind at the apex of your article.
Yep. Cars these days are designed by people who ride a bus to work.
Stock JKs are fine on the highway, at typical US speed limits. Still, they were never meant to be $70K vehicles and are never going to be very satisfying in that role. It's just the wrong platform.
Complete BS. 9 quarts (IIRC) of Castrol 20W50 and a few minutes on a creeper. Filters are about $20 each as I recall.
The 328 is a better car, but on your other points, you want to seek help from a qualified substance abuse therapist before it's too late.
Yeah, that's insane, considering the strong dollar these days. Toyota is taking people for a ride.
"Numbers" doesn't work when Fox News convinces 70% of the country that the police are saving us all from the next 9/11 by confiscating your brother's Camaro.
Unless you have more guns than they do, and you don't, there's not much point.
Yep, here you go.
Auto manufacturers have lost their minds when it comes to this kind of thing. My (2013) car's battery is in its front trunk, which can only be opened, you guessed it, electrically.
This still blows my mind because I know nothing about engineering
The people "in the know" can tell me how it was done for the last 500 years, but you can rest assured they do not know how it will be done next Tuesday.
To the extent that "GPS is garbage" the proper fix is still a technological one, not having people spend years trying to beat a computer.
I can't believe someone wrote an extradition treaty and didn't include bail jumping in there somewhere.
What's the statute of limitations on bail-jumping, though?