tj996
TJ996
tj996

Found the cop.

The details being we have asked for profit corporations to do it instead of being forced by the government. 

In this article you describe the truck as both a 2023 and a 2019...

His cousin was also in Automotive, selling half a million brake pads to Ray Zalinsky to keep Callahan Auto afloat. Rolls Royce of brake pads.

Seeing this image makes me feel even more sorry for this woman. Who just needed a car, and was desperate enough to trust a place like this.

No sign of intoxication or a medical cause of the crash.

Trust fund 

Came here to say the same - laughable journalistic standards in place these days at Jalopnik.

I wonder if his pending purchase of the CyberTruck had anything to do with his marital separation?

The other V35 variations apparently have crankshafts that aren’t able to rotate. The whole engine has to spin.

It’s as if allowing MBAs who only know accounting to run your company is a sure fire way to ruin it.

Another major factor is that cars traveling on battery power are much quieter than gas or diesel vehicles

GIGO: garbage in, garbage out--been true about computers since the Fifties and is still true today.

Once upon a time I was an intern for the Sonics. I can’t remember the exact event, but one night every guest got a free miniature American flag upon entrance. Our jobs, as interns, was removing all of the little gold Made In China stickers from some 10,000+ flags.

Trump rallies would look very different.

I could only imagine the chaos if a similar law was passed in the US.

You care, porsche envy, or you wouldn’t have read and commented.

ask that question to yourself, because you seem quite triggered over the whole thing. lol

“Our simulations showed the full 1/4 mi race would be close but with the same net result, so no need to risk it.”

What’s crazy to me is they could have claimed that the Cybertruck can do a 13s quarter mile while towing a car and that would still be extremely impressive. But it’s on-brand for them to cherry pick numbers and misrepresent what their products can actually do.