I have drums on the back of the 2002 Wrangler I’ve owned for 3 years with over 200k miles. I have no idea when the last time they were serviced was and at this point I’m just pretending they aren’t there.
I have drums on the back of the 2002 Wrangler I’ve owned for 3 years with over 200k miles. I have no idea when the last time they were serviced was and at this point I’m just pretending they aren’t there.
The Eyesight automatic braking in my Subaru. It’s messed up and almost caused accidents more often than it has actually saved me from one - especially in crowded roundabouts, and if there’s any kind of inclement weather (rain, snow, fog, direct sunset or sunrise) it’ll either turn itself off and on or just completely…
I could see converting places like a Sheetz or Love’s with attached restaurants into a viable long-haul charging stations. With the time it takes to charge up they need to provide people with something to do while they wait and selling pop and candybars like a traditional convenience store isn’t going to cut it…
It totally depends on what’s under you. If you can get to earth, you want narrow. If there’s feet of compact snow beneath you, then you should treat it like sand.
Ha, no, I have a 2002 Wrangler. Everything has a purpose.
I see nothing wrong with design choices for the sake of aesthetics. This is no different that putting a spoiler on the trunk or plastic vent looking things all over the place.
By default the car is a 4 cylinder. The premium subscription enables 2 more cylinders to make it a 6 cyl. The elite subscription makes it 8.
Jason’s dead........................serious about education
A Jeep XJ and a TJ are basically the same answer.
The only problem I’ve had with Carplay is sometimes I need to force quit iHeart from my phone and/or select the station on my phone because the stereo screen just sits there spinning.
How do you fit a mounted 12" compound sliding miter saw and some lumber in a 2002 Wrangler?
...or a CRV
We need the parts.
Yeah, I was casting a wide net with comfort and convenience. It’s comfortable to be safe and convenient to go fast and get good mpg.
For $27,000 I’d rather have 3 TJs. Who would actually spend that much when there are reasonable alternatives that give you a hell of a lot more value for significantly less.
On the other hand, 2005 STI vs. 2020 STI. Wrangler TJ vs. Wrangler JL (though the JL beats the JK).
Is it bad I really want to see what a catastrophic failure looks like during the spin cycle?
Riding a bike on a 60mph road seems like asking for trouble to me, assuming the photo at the end is of that stretch of road. But the article makes no mention of the speed limit, the driver’s speed, the position of the bikers on the road (shoulder or middle of the lane), or the characteristics of the road (was is a…
I literally, not even joking, have dreams where I find my old cars in my garage tucked behind stuff.
Most seasoned software developers will acknowledge that few things are truly impossible (within a wide margin of reason). But there is a difference between technically impossible and financially/reasonably impossible, and the latter is what is normally meant.