So long story short read all the parking signs twice.
So long story short read all the parking signs twice.
Italy.
Former owner here. The interior of the STS wasn’t falling apart on me, even after 200,000 miles. The only interior issue I had was with a little cubby beneath the climate controls and the driver's door seal wearing prematurely. When I got rid of it at 216K the interior was still squeak and rattle free.
When did we cross over into that age where a selfie is as safe as Russian roulette? We have countless stories like this. I’m reminded recently of the guy who fell into a volcano recently taking a selfie.
Another reason to pick the gasoline motor is emissions related. Today’s big diesels have issues with all the emission control equipment. In warranty it’s a hassle. Out of warranty it’s really really expensive.
Corvette owners think of their cars as "rare"? Never heard that before. I know of exceptions from the past but that's it.
GM has 2 sedans it would love for you not two forget about. Both start off as RWD. One even has a supercharged V8 with a manual transmission.
This seems like a problem width restrictions would fix. Place three concrete poles there and see will drivers start to pay attention then.
On a lot of levels it's stupid fun thou.
It's out there.
It is the cheape Luxury trim after.
The Blazer will be smaller. Don't forget this one is longer than a Tahoe.
Model year. The first year, which was limited to a few thousand cost $58K. Everything after that cost $62K. The base price was increased by $4 grand after the first model year.
Troll 😑
The First Edition, which limited to a relatively very few units, cost $58,705. Which is what this is. All other ones after the first model year, 2024 being available to buy, will cost $62,990.
Its a little longer than an Escalade. Your sense of length is, no offense, a little off.
The reason why it doesn't have magnetic dampers is because this a Luxury trim model. There probably will be a Platinum trim with it in the near future.
Huh, this isn’t Europe. The only thing available in America are mid-size and large patrol cars.
To hell with ducks and dogs crossing the road. They'll learn.
How can hydrogen be the next thing when there’s basically no hydrogen powered cars, basically no public hydrogen fueling network and there’s even less public awareness of it.