tommykar
TommyKar
tommykar

How much did the atomic bomb cost?

Figured, WTH are they going to do with all the current ICE vehicles, push them into Le Brea?

Which is why I phrased it “one of the first...”. Should also clarify as n/a engines. Around that time the Ferrari 355 made waves for it’s high specific output over 100 HP/L, but needed 5 valves and engine rebuilds every other week to do it.

Right? This is why I say that gross corporate malfeasance should only result in punishments so insignificant that they have no impact on corporate behavior. Otherwise the investors will get upset.

The transmission is an automatic (pun intended) $10K discount vs. a 6-speed car.  I believe that’s having an impact here.

The majority of human-made GHG comes from the energy production, agriculture, concrete production, steel production, and the drilling and extraction of fossil fuels. Transportation is a smaller percentage of that.

Abused, poorly maintained, wrecked and reconstructed. None of the maintenance or wrecks will EVER show up on a Carfax. For every government agency that is well funded there are two like Gary, Indiana. City vehicles are falling apart and being cannibalized before they are ever sold.

We also have a system of government that was literally designed to allow a minority of the population to have majority control of the laws. Makes that bribery thing a lot easier. 

No one who drives a Fiero kit car needs condoms.

They have to go one further than Saturn, so Uranus it is!

https://www.allpar.com/threads/the-chrysler-me-four-twelve.228140/

The Cadillac Sixteen was a masterpiece that would have given Cadillac the Bugatti of sedans, but I think GM did realize beating Rolls-Royce at their own game was beyond their willingness to open the money purse.

Harley v twin from the “loud pipes save lives crowd.” One continuous fart.

Reverse:  What was a T-rex doing in South Dakota?  Heading to Sturgis?

They are measured in inches for some reason.

Too late to edit.

I’m pretty sure it’s not 110 centimeters (centimetres) either.

The worst-case scenarios of ‘yesterday’ have consistently been proven to be the most likely scenarios of today. Which is to say, year after year, the projections keep getting worse and worse. We’re not freaking out enough because it’s not possible to freak out enough. It’s basically an apocalypse-level future hurtling

Bottom line is we’re paying to recycle plastic that largely gets put in landfills. Even if we “can” recycle plastic we mostly aren’t.