rdr0b11
David Ruddock
rdr0b11

That's extremely unlikely. I doubt Netflix could even afford to produce the show, let alone pay Jeremy Clarkson a salary. It's wishful thinking, sadly. Top Gear may just be dead.

The XK8 is the only remotely interesting choice on this list.

I'm testing a Sonata Limited (2.4, ugh) right now, and while it is nice, I'd still give it to the Mazda 6. The Sonata Limited is nicer if your primary concern in buying a mid-size economy sedan is luxury for dollar. The seats are comfier, the luxury perks are better (rear sun shades, ventilated and heated seats,

I'm pretty sure Mercedes successfully lost a lot of brand cachet when they started mixing part bins with Chrysler in the mid-90s. The W210 (E-Class), W202 (C-Class), W203 (C-Class), and C208 (CLK) were shitboxes. I've driven all of them, they are all absolutely miserable.

At least you can lay down in a cargo bay.

That's how you know you've made it big as a carmaker in Southern California: you car gets chop-topped by a bunch of idiots in the OC.

The powertrain really is, that turbo 5-pot is unkillable and a heck of a tuning platform a la 034 Motorsports (average mileage for a full rebuild is 300k+, seriously).

Hey, I had an S4, the fatter, 100-based Audi S of the early 90s.

To figure out your name and address, both of which are readily available to anyone with an internet browser, a credit card, and a couple of hours researching you? I'll go ahead and trust the DMV on this one, if only because the chance they'd do anything criminally competent with your license plate is essentially

Assclown is too kind.

I'm pretty sure I'm getting one, and here's why: it's built around the wireless generation. I use lots of Bluetooth stuff, tether, and generally hate having to carry dongles and cables and doodads with me. The less stuff in my bag, the better - I'm the one who has to carry it.

NSX-R STAHP

Eh, I never felt right about '99s-and-above on the 500SL after they replaced the M119 with a simpler, slightly lazier V8. The new engine wasn't bad, but I don't know if it'll hold up as well over time. The M119 was a beast.

Honestly, it doesn't hurt anybody, so who cares? As someone who also works in the consumer product media (granted, not vehicles), I definitely understand the whole announce-regurgitate-repeat thing around "new" product models that definitely aren't actually new. So we generally just don't cover them in our business

There's a kit registration process in most states as far as I know (https://www.dmv.ca.gov/portal/dmv/det…), and I think it's just a bit less rigorous (but not much) than the foreign import process. Some states limit the number of such vehicles that can be registered in a year, and some states (see: CA) lump in all

Honestly, I like the C300 - in the luxury trim.

The chance it falls off the cargo ship en route.

Chance this ends up in a climate-controlled shipping container / warehouse: 99.9995%.

It's true of many, many industries - not just cars. The irrational reverence of the iPhone in America. Japan's Sony-worship. Even LG and Samsung - they're like Ford and GM in Korea, they have die-hard fanboys that simply refuse to consider competitors' products. If you saw how Samsung and LG carted around South Korean

I'm guessing they just spliced the [apparently extremely rudimentary] CAN bus leads to a simple board with a Bluetooth transmitter, connected that to a smartphone, and monitored the raw output as they would do things with the in-car controls. Then it's just a matter of pushing those commands back to the car. I'm