My favourite teacher was killed in a Ka so I’m predisposed to disliking them.
My favourite teacher was killed in a Ka so I’m predisposed to disliking them.
Kinja’d
A graphic novel called Hard Boiled:
Haven’t seen a new Rodius. The Tivoli is all I have seen, and they’re fairly forgettable. The only reason I noticed was because it had “TEST DRIVE THE NEW SSANGYONG TIVOLI” decal’d on the sides.
I only remember there being three rows. They were pretty big rows though.
They sold PLENTY of Rodiuses (Rodii?) in Ireland. Many were used as taxis, which is the only time I’ve had occasion to be in one. They were certainly... large. I also remember trim pieces coming apart and a seatbelt not working.
I would definitely recommend it. Specifically the Northwest 200. Great buzz around the place. Take some extra time to enjoy some of Ireland’s best driving roads on the northern coast. The coastal drive from, more or less Warrenpoint in Co. Down all the way around to Co. Derry are amongst my favourite. Then take the…
You’d never get me on a crotch rocket, but I did spend my childhood watching the Dunlops racing at Dundrod and the Northwest 200, among others. Always suspected my grandad was a distant relative. He and Joey even looked very similar.
Well considering this is Yorkshire, I wouldn’t go near Guinness. The Brits don’t do it well.
The Mazda looks good in that it’s far more restrained than a lot of other pickups coming on the market of late. To me, it looks like they changed nothing beyond the front end of that Isuzu.
So by that logic, because my surname is Dunlop, I should have Dunlop tyres on my car?
Even better when you hear someone say it.
Not only is he real (though his name sounds more Irish than English), he was part of the cast in one of the best sitcoms of the last twenty years in Phoenix Nights. Though I’d imagine you’d have to be from These Islands to get a lot of the humour.
Hehe. Holes.
The plate has remained with the vehicle throughout its life in Ireland at least some 1987 when we changed to our current format - xx (last two digits of year) or xx1 xx2 since 2013 (131 being January-June 2013, 132 being July to December, then a one- or two-letter city or county code (D for Dublin, L for Limerick…
I don’t know if it’s my foreign brain, but I don’t know what that means.