Is there any way to find out how many of these have survived?
Is there any way to find out how many of these have survived?
I am truly sorry, just a glip this one - I didn’t mean to offend. GM is very well-known for bad designs, at best average, at worst...worst build and material quality in the markets they compete in. It is a company that excels at being cheap. This approach to car design, building, maintenance has a cost, and this is…
Sorry, no intention to hurt your feelings - seriously. I’ve also owned my share of crap cars. With GM, that’s just my underlying assumption, based on accumulated statistics and personal experience.
That is amazing. I had no idea that spark plugs can actually...eh...take the heat like that. I am guessing it is a GM or “other crap” vehicle?
Haha, I’m not even going to ask about your wife.
Except that the supersuccess XC90 now comes with 20’’ wheels, too. But it’s a good observation: Space utilization is still dependent on the continent. I’d love a cross-continent car review: A kei car minivan vs a Škoda Superb diesel wagon vs an Escalade vs an UAZ Hunter vs a South American Fiat Palio wagon or…
Never a good thing to destroy anyone’s property by being an idiot...
Second car? Big wagon? Ancient print media? Rejoice over this period response:
An Escalade in an escalator though. Worth a front page.
No fire?
Ah, makes sense. I thought it looked oddly diminished, but then I thought it was a 90s Nissan...they usually have the solidity of a soda can.
Appears to be a safe assumption to make. One can never truly understand morons, cough, but throwing a car down the stairs which has a VIN or license plate related to the offenders wouldn’t be too smart.
...but Porsche did? It always fascinates me that there seems to have been a time and place for everyone.
Isn’t that what happened in the 70s, anyway? Volvo’s PV444/544 and Amazon used to dominate certain rallye events. Enter Porsche, Quattro and a degree of professionalism that small privateers and Volvo couldn’t stomach.
Perfect.
1500 yards up top, 1500 meters in the article - which one is it?
Where are all the replies gone on this one?