Reading this made me spit out some of my fish taco onto my Nike t-shirt, I am shocked at this news.
Reading this made me spit out some of my fish taco onto my Nike t-shirt, I am shocked at this news.
There’s a few assumptions going on here.
In flight break ups aren’t typically pilot error. That being said, the volume of the crashes also have to do with the volume of sales and headline quality clientele.
Among many other names.
The “forked-tail doctor killer” strikes again. The V-class Beechcraft Bonanzas have a history that is not great.
So what are you suggesting? That data like that on EVs there would be MORE longer trips than shorter ones? Otherwise you’re proving my point.
My mother is from MA, but we lived in MI, so a few times a year we would road trip to her parents through Canada, meaning a few times a year I would get to see Niagara Falls. We didn’t always go the Rainbow bridge, but when the weather was right, we would just to get to see it and stretch our legs a little.
Not mine, the use case of the vast majority of drivers. Road tripping is a minute fraction of miles driven by the market. The car’s not for you because 4 days out of the year it would be an inconvenience? ::shrug:: Find one that works.
I’m still here, but it’s the Stockholm syndrome that keeps me coming back.
I’d say GM’s “HotShot” heated windshield washer fluid system. Because when it work in chilly climes, the ice/snow/frost came off in a jiffy. There was that nagging problem of fires that led to a recall of 1.5M of the units, but it was great to not have to scrape the entire windshield of a big Escalade or H2 when they…
The issue also was tires. The 185/70R14 tires, and quality of OEM tire, are not nearly as sticky (nor as wide) as the modern day tire design meaning the tires get overwhelmed quickly leading to the skid. ABS would likely increase the braking distances in this case since it’s dry and ABS is not designed specifically to…
It’s funny because minivans were perfectly cool for families relative to station wagons until the Ford Explorer came out.
Range fixation is a wild way to look for a daily driver that gets refueled in a driveway.
I remember wanting a Forester in 2008 when I bought my Vibe. It was ultimately too costly for my poorness, but you could get an XT with a manual all that cargo space and gear attachment points, and really enjoy both your weekend and your drive.
Don’t get me wrong, I would totally snatch one up if there was a clean one for sale nearby, but at no time was it a some amazing car, it just looked cool and had some fun gimmicks.
I’m going to show my age a little here, but when I was a kid, walking through the neighborhood I always loved the Nissan Pulsar NX SEs. Likely for the tail lights alone because the rest of the car was biblically terrible. Leaking t-top roof, cramped interior with a pitiful layout, and a thrashy but slow drivetrain.
Guys, the Jetta GLI and Civic Si exist. With manuals. New for his price range.