I don't know what I could get by trading in a rusted out 98 Subaru Outback with 200,000 miles on it.
I don't know what I could get by trading in a rusted out 98 Subaru Outback with 200,000 miles on it.
That is a bit nerve racking. I go to a small strip called Dragway 42 in Ohio. All though I've never seen an accident to serious and the track was always cleaned, the equipment doesn't look different since the strip was founded 50 years ago.
I'm going to have to say Chrysler. They have always come out with such crazy ideas. A lot of them we're hit and miss but some we're amazing.
Actually, Smart car with a Hayabusa engine
This + Corvette/Ford V8.
This man deserves one of these.
This might work
I probably am the only one but I miss Saturn. They made a good, economic, simple, reliable, cheap little car.
What else can you get for $100,000 that a track beast. I'll open with one of these.
Larry the Cable Guy and the Larrymobile from The Health Inspector. A red neck with a red neck truck. Git-r-Done
Jeremy's Lancia Beta from the Botswana special. Because ultralight, gullwing, honey badger repelling door.
How do you not mention Godzilla
To Porsche, I present thee, The Golden Cock Award.
That would have to be the Dodge Viper GTS. I loved the look of it, and when I heard it had a V10 I was stunned (since as a kid I thought the biggest was a V8). Since then it has been my dream to own almost all types of Vipers made.
The answer is always Miata. Cheap, fun, econimical.
Not only that, but using the overdrive on the freeway gets phenomenal gas mileage.
Companies need to put pop ups back on cars. I don't give a damn if it ruins the aerodynamics at night I love pop ups.
I think he did say once that the Miata is a cheap knock off of the British sports car.
I got mine for $1,000 from my neighbor. It had a ripped top, bad clutch, and 120,000 on odometer. Its still a bargain hoot and looks good after we painted it orange.