skuhnphoto
As Du Volant
skuhnphoto

I wasn't suggesting specifically a Ram and a Civic, just a truck and a small car. Civic is the generic example of what pops into my head when I think "small efficient car."

Ah, the classic shit brown. Subaru had a good one of those in the 80's:

But is it available in brown?

A giant pickup truck and a smaller, fuel-efficient car. Many people need a large truck for work, towing, and hauling. But they're not the most practical thing for commuting in, and they're a pain to parallel park.

CP to the extreme.

But how well does it drive over a PT Cruiser?

Well crap. So I did.

Charger Hellcat.

It's applied at the factory.

This. When I first got my dog I used to let her ride shotgun. One day someone pulled out in front of me and I punched the brakes hard, and she slammed into the dashboard. I still remember the awful thump sound. She was a little bruised but okay. Ever since then dogs go in the back seat, wearing a car harness which I

The jet engine. The world would be a lot bigger without it.

Fixed that for you.

Wow. This is beyond NP.

By now, you've probably seen the video where I use a Hummer to crush a Chrysler PT Cruiser. If you haven't, then boy, that was a hell of a spoiler.

Living in a state with inspections it's amazing how much crap they keep off the road. Our cars in Pennsylvania may not always be much to look at but whenever I cross the state line into Ohio it's mind boggling what kind of POS cars are being driven there.

It's a result of horrible negligence. The brakes have worn down to nothing but the person just kept on driving. Many times this happens once they've worn the brake pads down to the metal, the metal on metal contact eventually grinds the rotor away.

That's correct.

I'm sure there are worse stories, but what's personally terrifying for me is that this sort of thing happens on a pretty regular basis:

The wood block in the driveshaft story. I'm not sure what the original story was as I've seen it reposted many places with different stories, but it's a photo of a driveshaft with a wooden block bolted in where the driveshaft attaches to the yoke. Trying to find the photo now.

Only 1990s Mazda would be insane enough to build a mid-engined, gullwinged city car.