sammyno55
Sammyno55
sammyno55

Not ‘puddles’ so much as upwelling (except for the ones that nature exposed - at the surface, they appear as water features). There are a lot of pit excavations in that area, and tar actually seeps from the ground over a wide area. You’re right, but it’s the Wilshire District (even though the park/museum is located on

I voted for the Caddy solely because the bastardization of the word “coupe” thing.

Just a side note: The auto playing video ads are really annoying. As someone who works in advertising and has had experience with rich media ads I can tell you they don’t work and its a great way to turn off users.

Several years ago, my wife was shopping for a new car. She put together a spreadsheet (she loves spreadsheets) before we went to the dealers. She showed the spreadsheet to one of the salesmen, and he just handed over the keys for us to take the test drive ourselves. He didn’t wanna waste his time on a well-informed

Not sure where you live, but that is a ridiculous statement here in Atlanta. Even a ragged out e36 M3 is selling for double this money.

I’ll buy it as long as it’s a CPO so when the CUE craps out it’ll be covered.

Honestly, I’d drop it in my 88 Fiero GT if it was a little more powerful. Electric Fieros are not a new thing, but a drop in package is pretty appealing. But 110 hp is just a little short on oomph.

It’s a very well documented issue. Just because yours hasn’t experience the issue doesn’t mean it won’t eventually. As for your second statement, I agree. It’s a relatively simple fix, but it can be costly to replace the battery packs. This sort of failure has rendered these cars “totaled” before.

Wouldn’t he be better off with a regular LS? While I’d ordinarily agree with your statement that Toyota/Lexus are bulletproof, these things are reaching an age where the batteries are going to need some “maintenance” or replacement. Priuses (is that correct?) of similar age usually require a battery pack swap by the

Absolutely, and it is a thing here for those who are lucky enough to live in houses, but even apartment parking lots/garages have a limited number of electric spaces, too. Just depends how old your apartment building is.

One thing to remember is that even if your own apartment doesn’t come with electric charging

We had a contractor build our website. Among the many problems was they set the backup to run daily and store a copy on the server that got picked up by the Backup system. It ran daily and they never deleted the old copies. 60 days later we were out of drive space. 

Severely lacking in dynamism. 

5th: So 13 out of 18 manufacturers failed to meet regulations. Why single-out FCA? Wouldn’t it be more informative to highlight the 13 that failed and the cumulative fine? Maybe mention the 5 that met regulations?

Not to mention Dana 35 rear. The C-clips are notoriously weak in that one. With minorly oversized tires its not too hard to snap that axle. When I was shopping for my TJ it was 4.0L, 5-speed, Dana44, Air conditioning, or nothing.

Jeep? It doesn’t look like one. Where are the trademark Angry Eyes? 

The hardware engineer, product manager, NPI manager, and everyone up the chain responsible for reviewing MTBF here should be ceremonially hung upside down naked, covered in honey, and set upon by a colony of fire ants.*

Honestly as long as you can turn off the nannies with a hard switch (no burying TCS button 5 menus deep like Ford does) I’m fine with them, as someone who drives a RWD pickup truck in a snowy climate they’ve saved my ass a few times.

Can someone cite a source?