The one time I got stopped for speeding in Miami I was...going 143. So yeah.
The one time I got stopped for speeding in Miami I was...going 143. So yeah.
“Seatbelts kill more people than they save!”
haha figures. I [falsely, frustratingly] assumed a 2014 Sequoia would have all sorts of new tech features...but god Toyota is behind on the times on some cars. Sure, 50k got me leather power seats and a big truck, but not even memory seats or pushbutton/keyless entry
Careful, I hear there’s a Testarossa and a Daytona on the force.
I bought one of these in 2002 to get through our wonderful Syracuse winters, so I could put my “ good” cars away.It was wonderfully dull. Numb steering, wooden brakes and the lovely, kinda velour seats. I beat he hell out of that poor thing. Gotta say though, even on the coldest days it always started and it never…
If you’re doing two digit speeds on the turnpike you’re a risk.
I’d forfeit my seat for that upgrade.
They need to invest in S.C.M.O.D.S.
I was doing 90 this morning on the Dolphin Expressway and was passed by a Prius like I was going in reverse.
Trust me we tried to finish it the night before but that proved impossible!
Obviously Fry;
My ‘68 Sedan Deville had automatic lights and even base model Kias have them now, so it’s not like it’s new or expensive technology. Of all the automotive things people want to automate, the headlights would be the easiest to impliment, one of the least intrusive in regards to the driving experience, and would…
Yep. And the culprits are almost always a Toyota, Nissan, or Honda because they’re apparently too cheap to put a $1 light sensor in their base models. Everyone else seems to be able to afford it just fine.
In part because acceleration is easy, countermanding physics on the other hand is hard. Since an electric motor makes maximum torque from some fraction of 1 rpm (let’s not say zero because there’s no net work being done at zero torque) getting rapid acceleration is relatively easy with little range penalty from not…
it was called coke-white in the 1980s.
It’s a reverse funnel.
He got a DUI and that negatively impacted his career enough that I almost felt bad for him.