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The Ten Greatest Space Achievements Nobody Knows About

Automatic seat belts weren't a late 70's thing - they were a late 80's/early 90's thing

Or rev match, or double-clutch, or proper preemptive shifts for turns, or gear selection for going up/down hills, or ...

He still has his brake pedal, but that doesn't mean he'd use it.

The author could have just put that last section first, then I could have stopped reading.

It looks like Elon Musk was distracted, too.

Reminds me of instructions given by an armored truck company to its drivers: if attacked, shoot the guy, and then pretend to give aid. It looks good to witnesses, but increases the likelihood that the attacker dies.

Don't assume it has anything to do with what lane he's driving in. More likely it was a case of cutting him off, flipping him off, or some other actively dangerous action.

Just sayin' ...

I have no problem with this.

Those were common when I was growing up. I haven't seen any in a long, long time. I thought it had gone away, too.

But if those things went away, how would we know who the douchebags around us are?

That's nice & all, but how does it look when you include Alaska? (Just a hunch, but I bet there's a lot more nowhere up there.)

The RX-8, the new 6, and the reskinned CX-9 have the same feature, but the CX-5 does not.

I would expect that Mazda thinks that people who buy a Speed3 don't want the extra weight & higher CoG. Also, they may really want to limit variations to keep costs down.

It adds weight, and that weight is in the worst location.

A smile on a roadster fits. A Miata is a happy car. But I never cared for it on their other cars.

There are a lot of things they got right on this car, but unfortunately, a lot they got wrong, too.

I like it.

I could support legislation for capital punishment for any guy who wears too-short skinny jeans, no socks, & clown shoes.