This..
This..
I like you. If we end up in the soup lines together, I’ll make it certain that you get the better dollop of the two.
Probably because it never sat. In my opinion a car that gets driven all the time and has high miles but is well maintained is usually way more reliable than a low mileage garage queen.
Alternatively, you can add NOS directly to the fuel system. Gas stations sell them in cans, typically in the refrigerated section to keep them fresh.
Let’s not forget “then the got it to do” from the opening paragraph!
Must be step mom... he's 47
Gawker Media the place where the left can do no wrong, the right is always the enemy, and there’s no such thing as a moderate. It would be nice to come to a website about cars and not have a political spin on every third article.
Like a post-Doug Doug post...
As a prior owner of a 95 with the 2.3t, CP at any price. it’s more like the Amy Fisher edition with that engine.
I’ve only had one true “barn find” incident in my life personally. I was about 18 years old and worked for JC Penney. During my lunch one summer, I was looking through the Dallas Times Herald’s car classifieds and saw “Old Mercury for Sale. Make offer.” with the phone number. It was late in the day, on a Friday, but I…
It was very jerky at low speed. It hung onto revs oddly. It wasn’t particularly fast when shifting (what is supposed to be the primary benefit of these). It was glitchy (every now and then the clutch wouldn’t engage- I hit the gas and the refs jump like it’s in neutral even though it’s in drive- was never replicated…
My mind is boggled at the comments I’m reading down here. Everything from “he’s an asshole,” to “he doesn’t care about his kids safety.”
What. The. Fuck. Are you people serious?!
1. The kids seem to be having fun. Hell, I’d love to try this challenge. I dunno any kid that wouldn’t find this amusing.
2. The dad seems to…
I'd imagine states that see regular amounts of heavy, heavy snow fall that they would be required but after a short Google search there are no states that require them. Seems kind of odd for northern states but I switch tires in the winter. Totally worth it
Some roads restrict traffic to require either chains or snow tires during the winter, but there is not blanket requirement. And generally these are canyon roads, mountain passes, and similar, not city streets or highways or anything like that.
If you live in a snowy area, you're probably already swapping snow tires on in the winter. Either that or you're lying to yourself about the benefits of AWD.
I’m just repeating what I was told!
I’m just repeating what I was told!
The morning shift only came out 17 minutes ago and we have COTD already.
A BMW badge?