How many of those pedestrians walked out in front of a car going at full speed expecting them to stop? I imagine the ones that made it to the other side didn’t.
How many of those pedestrians walked out in front of a car going at full speed expecting them to stop? I imagine the ones that made it to the other side didn’t.
I didn’t know cars could stop on a dime. And what’s to say the car didn’t try to brake?
You assume a human driver would have been able to react and stop in time.
Would a human driver been able to avoid this? From what I’ve read so far, the pedestrian was crossing outside of a crosswalk at night. Doesn’t exactly seem like something most drivers would have been able to avoid either.
The grille is huge so that a human can safely pass through without damaging the bumper when the car inevitably plows into a crowd outside of a Cars and Coffee.
The way his arms went all stiff gave me some really bad deja vu of Jahvid Best’s concussion (a fellow Cal Bear):
Believe it or not, the current RDX doesn’t actually have SHAWD. It has the same RT AWD system that the current CRV has.
I’d call it faux-luxury
They didn’t. Those are definitely PZ4 summer tires.
It has summer tires. Not sure what she said they’re A/S when they are definitely PZ4s.
Those are definitely the summer tires. You can see the little arrow thing after the ZERO that the A/S version doesn’t have
There are many non-car people who actually do think brakes = breaks. Best not lump yourself in with them.
How much does financing make the decision for you?
Your bean weigh to picky hear.
Toyota’s commitment to bring back to market its most iconic sports car.
You mean that one tweet that has been retweeted almost a quarter-million times? That one?
I believe the 200K is based on deliveries, not production, so they could continue producing while halting deliveries at #199,999, provided they have somewhere to store them.
They could always stockpile a ton of Model 3s, and then wait until the first day of a quarter to deliver #200,000. Then they’d effectively have two quarters to deliver as many cars as possible, with every one of those owners receiving the full $7500 federal tax credit.
Is the depreciation based on the average selling price when new, or MSRP? Some of the cars on the list can be had for thousands under MSRP (*cough*ILX*cough), which could make the actual realized depreciation really low.
Fair enough, though having done three years worth of 90 minute commuting (one-way) in LA with a stick shift, you won’t get a whole lot of sympathy for me ;).