An underrated benefit.
An underrated benefit.
Plus it should stop door dings.
It seems that I misunderstood your post - it read like you were saying that Garland was incorrect in describing someone who was physically unable to drive a manual car as having a disability. If that wasn’t what you meant, no worries.
Not having the ability to use a clutch safely and without pain is a disability. I’ve had to deal with it on and off for about five years now thanks to disc issues, and I certainly feel much less able when it's bad.
Every sixth car or so (make and model anyway).
This is a reasonably concise definition:
It’s a genuinely awful ideology, and a terrible belief system for a political leader. And it describes this pretty perfectly.
A goofy, nightmare phenomenon describes this (and neoliberalism more generally) to a tee.
AW11 MR2 is clearly and indisputably the correct answer. Particularly the seals on the targa panels...
Time is meaningless now. You should have got the memo about it next Thursday.
Given that people have been asking for it for 30 years, and for 20 of those 30 years there was a rotary that could have been fitted but wasn’t...
I knew exactly what you were talking about from the notification, before I even saw the still from the start of the video.
Piranha III, made by The Edge (not that one):
Very true - you don’t have to be loveable to be the best, but it helps if you’re not the best.
You would just connect it electrically to the truck and use it to supply power to the truck motor, wouldn’t you?
In terms of the dealer network, would it be cynical of me to suggest that they’re not terribly keen on selling vehicles that won’t be much of an income stream in the service department?
I know that if I were buying a vehicle for commercial use, I would want to be very, very sure of the configuration, because I would want to maximise the capability-to-cost ratio. I suspect that a lot of commercial buyers would do the same - particularly if they’re buying for a fleet.
WA is definitely the Texas of Australia, right down to their desire to secede from the Federation.
Hang on, you’re saying that Kimi isn’t a stick in the mud? That’s his whole thing! His public persona is a straight-talking grump. And people love him for it.
I really don’t think he gives a single solitary shit about being famous. He wants to win. And popularity doesn’t help him win, though winning clearly makes him popular.