twochevrons
twochevrons
twochevrons

I'm originally from New Zealand, and most of our cars get the smaller European and Japansese-spec engines. Having moved to the US, I can't get over how overpowered cars are. The Mk6 VW Golf here came with a 17ohp, 2.5 litre inline 5 as the base-model engine. Not that I mind – my wife has one, and it is quite enjoyably

Aha. I stand corrected.

That stereo sounds like it was designed by somebody who read about Citroën's famously unconventional control layouts of the past (indicators controlled by buttons, rotating-drum dials, stereos mounted between the seats) and thought that they'd have a go at it. Not cool.

This. I recently bought an 850R wagon as a project / winter beater, and have been having great fun wrestling with torque-steer and front end wheelspin. They look barely any different from your run of the mill 850. Stock, they're surprisingly quick, but it's very easy to make them go even quicker. The boosted five-pot

Mine's not been too bad (yet) - it has the earlier four-speed automatic that is supposed to be fairly bulletproof in stock applications. I bought it as a dirt-cheap non-runner (dead cam sensor), but with that fixed, it hasn't been too bad. I fully expect it to drive me mad, but until then, it's just fun, cheap

Sometimes, I just sit in my 850R and make 'vroom vroom' noises.

I was driving along a single lane road one night at slightly higher than the speed limit, when some assclown in a truck came up behind me at a great rate of knots, and then proceeded to hang right on my bumper, flashing high beams and generally making a nuisance of himself.

7.) Volvo 850 T5-R

Heh, I just bought one! They may not be all that quick by modern standards (240-250bhp, 0-60 around 6 or 7 seconds, depending on the transmission), but I can verify that they are still total hoonmobiles, with a high smiles-per-gallon factor.

I've seen that done before.

Awesome! I have a rough but drivable '56 MGA that I'm slowly fixing up. I haven't yet brought it to any MG club events (mostly because it entirely lacks weather protection, and I'm not confident of its reliability), but British car people tend to be a good bunch, for sure.

Yes! My folks' Alfa 164 has that, too. Incredibly satisfying!

Yeah, I'm totally sold on the station wagon concept, and really hope that they make a comeback in the US – I find the high ride height, and the resultant ride and handling compromises, of SUVs and CUVs to be very off-putting. Somewhere I remember reading that the current Jetta wagon actually has more load area than

You're not the only one. I've my heart set on the full Jalop edition in brown as my 'sensible car' once I graduate. There are a few in my neighbourhood already, and I actually really like how they look.

Amber turn signals seem to have been mandated in the late '50s or early '60s in Europe. From the '60s onward, I'm not aware of any home-market European car with red turn signals. For example, the original MGA, launched in 1956, had red combined brake/turn signals (and white combined parking lights and indicators at

They tried - ISO 4165 was intended to be a general-purpose 12v connector for automotive accessories - it is kind of like a lighter socket, but much smaller diameter, and with a notch in the plug so that it doesn't fall out if you look at it funny. Needless to say, it never caught on, but my old Citroën had one (in

I'm guessing "top hose" is probably the upper radiator return hose? Berzerk is always a fun thing for a hose to do, no matter what.

Yay, someone else who has watched that show!