As the crappy-ass Disqus seems to have deleted my original comment:
As the crappy-ass Disqus seems to have deleted my original comment:
He says we’re going the wrong way.
“Covert Chevrolet” operates behind a Kia sign, right?
Compare ‘em with the models they replaced. They were a revelation at the time.
Boat appears to be under power, at least at first?
“The Czinger Hyper GT Is a Four-Seat, Gullwing Door Hypercar”
So, what does it take to get a 20-year-old car that’s barely been driven to be a reliable driver? Hoses, belts, fluids, tires?
Can title be transferred to an out-of-state buyer without the test, or is it required on any sale?
Those idiotic headlights are just covers/lenses that would be easy to remove, right?
“A school bus carrying dozens of bus drivers...”
I love that this vehicle has literally no utility for any useful function. Genius, you ask me.
I have little experience with your specific example, but you raise a good point. One would think rental companies would want some degree of standardization so customers don’t have to spend an hour getting accustomed to the system.
Yeah, this is how they did it on the Milwaukee Road's electrified routes in MT, ID, WA 100 years ago. It's abandoned now.
“Miami-Dude Police”
Yeah, I’m too lazy at the moment but I’d love to see video of the poor bastard trying to herd this pig around the track at anything like “speed.”
“...some rich person...”
“This one is of interest because it has relatively low miles...”
Pinto Cruising Wagon. Ford capitalized on the ‘70s vanning scene with a factory option package that was basically decals and the bubble windows. The package was also available on the full-size Econoline, and I think there was an F-150 package (without the portholes)?