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In the UK, electric milk floats have been on the road continuously since the 1930s. Sadly, even very, very old ones are beyond Lemons level money for the simple reason that they are too simple and robust to ever die.

Best. Pizza delivery vehicle. Ever.*

Every machine is a compromise, and if you don’t absolutely need performance, it’s amazing how much capability you can get for minimal outlay. That’s something Americans used to know as well...

In a continent in which I've yet to see either a Model 3 or a Bolt, this will do just fine.

All the best designs stay around for fifteen years at least.

It’s kind of intriguing. They clearly thought about this.

There’s “ooooold” and then there’s “who forgot to lock the museum?” It's no mean feat to get those supersonic soviet tractors to fly at all, but quite another to use them in any sort of anger.

I loved the original concept, but I’m strangely unmoved by this near production one.

Tsk. Amateurs.

I don't care what anyone says; the Fiat 124 was one very elegant design.

...and brings embedded Google services to a car for the first time...

If the criterion is that “something be done” *clutches pearls*, then couldn’t you just pour a bucket of warm water over their very revealing Freudian imputation and be done with it in this case?

I’m not especially bothered about VW trucks - electric or no - but why on God’s green earth do Porsche not offer that gorgeous shade on their proper cars?

A 2019 Silverado is basically a 1959 Bel Air sixty years on.

Simple: unlike the 10th gen. Suzuki Every, but like the VW Bus, the 9th gen. Suzuki Every was a cab-over design. The cleaner body side design helps as well.

I don’t get it. Isuzu would happily sell you any number of different purpose built crew cab overs in different sizes back when that mash-up was new. Why reinvent one badly?

Trouble is, that squadron of Facebook trolls seem to be more effective than any amount of hardware in neutralising adversaries...

The 2012 Land Rover LR2 was even a named plaintiff in the case.

I come across one of these regularly on my very wet and often salty commute.