ttyymmnn
ttyymmnn
ttyymmnn

We can only hope...

If you watch Diamonds closely, during scene where he's driving the moon rover, the rover drives out of camera and then one of the wheels comes bouncing back into the frame (from the left, IIRC). There are many bloopers like that in the film. But Jill St. John in a bikini makes up for many of them.

Hey! Don't get in the way of our Internet outrage!

Reminds me of this. 8.2 mpg LOL

A friend had one of those back in the 80's. Not sure what year it was. It was fantastic. Right up until he got drunk and totaled it.

I'm surprised I was first.

How quickly we forget.

For Sweden makes a good point about the guy doing his own maintenance. That made me wonder what sort of maintenance is required by the FAA for private planes. Regularly scheduled maintenance on passenger jets is what keeps them flying safely for years. But with private planes, is there any mandated maintenance, or is

I think it's been shooped.

I hadn't even noticed that. Good catch.

I moved to live with my dad in '76, and the first family car we got was, I believe, a '77 Caprice. I was never old enough to really drive it, but my older brother swears that it was one of the best cars he's even driven. We replaced it later with a 4th gen, but it was nowhere near as good as that '77.

I've been told that my picture is not a 77. Thanks, google. Let's try this one.

1977, third generation. Motor Trend Car of the Year.

AC was factory. Over the years of being driven in Houston (which is why it never rusted), the heat caused the dashboard ducts to warp. It was supposed to blow out of the two center vents, but at the end only blew out the right one. But for one passenger, it was perfectly adequate, even in Houston. No wing windows,

Groovy patina! The first car I ever drove was Rabbit, belonging to my Dad. I think it was an '82. I love the hatchback form, and the Fox wagon, basically an extended hatch, was just about the perfect size. I loved it.

1988 VW Fox wagon. I put 175k miles on it before moving on to an '01 Golf that I still have. I ended up donating the Fox to a shelter for battered women, and they sold it. The man who came to take it away said that it would likely end up somewhere in Central America. I hope somebody got to drive it. I loved that

I tend to rate my wines by price. I'm not enough of an aficionado to tell that the $40 bottle of wine is that much better than the $12 bottle. As a good friend once told me, "A good bottle of wine is one that you like." If you like Yellow Tail, drink it, no matter what any reviewer says. The same is true for

Interesting. How long have they been doing this overlap crash testing? I'd be interested to know how my '03 Odyssey did/would do.

I'll just leave these here.