ronman
ronmancvu
ronman

Every police car since the '50s has had a certified speedometer, and agencies that use their cars for traffic stops calibrate them at least once a year. That's because people challenge the tickets all the time - but as soon as that sheet of paper showing it was calibrated within a reasonable period of time, the ticket

Not in Florida.

Well, they lost me with the 60-second intro.

"OBDII and higher"
Such as??

The car's PCM is what's sending out the data. How do you think they work currently?

Friend's '77 Dodge truck had one. I would assume that if a peak-Malaise Dodge work truck had one, that just about everything would.

Yeah, damn you rich assholes and your... used cars? Get a life, dude.

Duh.

It's actually called a Malfunction Indicator Light.... semantics.

Hahahaha, as if people actually read things!

He wasn't eating in the car. Sometimes - and this may come as a shock to you - it is necessary to use a car to transport food and other grocery items from their place of purchase to the home or other place of use.

Man, if only parking brakes were serviceable items...

33 states have no safety inspection... including California and New Jersey. So, if anything, you're the one making assumptions, since substantially more than half the country doesn't do it.

"Rotators" lol

Yes, clearly that's what's happened here.

Actually, I don't know what the hell they did, but whatever they did was good enough to bind the driveline so intensely that the transfer case exploded rather gratuitously.

Luckily it was the front, which is a factory coilover, so the spring kept the shock from flying out and killing someone. Lucky for him it happened when we were working on it instead of when he hit another pothole. Otherwise he'd probably have won a Darwin Award."

Do people actually not know that a clutch interlock prohibits you from starting the car unless the clutch is depressed, and that it's an incredibly basic and simple device that has been installed on vehicles since the late '60s?

I suggest not getting a coma at all, generally speaking.

It's a 1984 S10 with an Iron Duke.