They know exactly what they’re doing right now, and they know they’re going to need those bulletproof cars soon.
They know exactly what they’re doing right now, and they know they’re going to need those bulletproof cars soon.
We had a good run. Maybe Mother Nature can do something less self destructive when the squids crawl out of the ocean and take over when we’re gone.
It’s too easy to find the same model with fewer miles for half the price. ND. This dude knows what he has, and definitely needs to keep it at that price.
There are rare instances when the internet is actually a better source. Anything a Florida boat driver says should absolutely be ignored.
Cougar.
“In parts of the Deep South, Ford, Falstaff and Philip Morris have been nicknamed “The Three Fs”
https://www.yahoo.com/news/her-parents-were-injured-tesla-010111764.html
Yes, but there’s already a Rubicon X that is twice the price of a base Wrangler. This thing is nearly four times the price of a base Wrangler.
A $110,000 Wrangler?
Sometimes I dream about blowing myself, but never in public like that clown just did.
If I have to rent a car to make long distance drives, like road trips to visit family that live in other states, or going camping in remote areas of southern Utah, I’m not going to buy a low range EV and will keep my ICE car instead.
No Subaru, either.
Yeah, doesn’t seem to make much sense. There’s 1.5 million DUI’s each year, but only 1.9 million Pontiac’s registered, accounting for less than 1% of all cars.
But the wraps damage the truck faster than rust.
I had a Samurai in high school, and then got a Sidekick a couple after graduating. Insanely fun to offroad, especially showing up truck boys that would easily get stuck. I’d give up my left nut to have one again.
Suzuki Samurai/Sidekick.
“The death toll from the three crashes totals 72 people, making this one of the deadliest periods in American aviation since 2001.”
The Samurai I drove in high school looked amazing caked in a deep layer of dried mud. The light blue color was immaterial.
~100 miles of Salt Flats, that let storms pick up enough salt and dust to cover absolutely everything in a salty, dusty, grimy bath that dries into an obvious mess.
Animals aren’t my problem, I live east of the Salt Flats. The storms that roll in from the coast pick up tons of crap and drop it on my car any time it rains or snows. None of that salty dust crap makes it into the Uintah mountains, it ends up over anything left outside long before then.