vuwildcat07
vuwildcat07
vuwildcat07

As soon as I head into Lancaster County, I can find Ethanol Free gas at many of the major c-store chains.

The back end reminds me of the old RSX

Pirates fans have been beating this drum for over a decade, but when you have a newspaper/resort owner who has been benefitting from revenue share without increasing payroll into nine figures, the outlook is pretty bleak.

I can count the number of bridges in a ten mile stretch (between the city limits and where the tracks cross to the other side of the road they parallel) where traffic goes over instead of under the tracks with one hand.

Needs to be good enough to drain 3” of rain in an hour. That is what that area got last week with Ida. Otherwise you’d now have a frequent flood spot.

There is sinkhole repair on 76 at the King of Prussia ramps. Most traffic is heading to those ramps and the two lanes are reduced to one currently. I’m sure the backups led to the driver being routed off 476 NB and straight onto that road.

It’s closed due to construction

I actually live near this bridge - it’s narrow and low.  I’m guessing the driver wanted to avoid backups on I-76 (especially since the CarMax is located near a construction project that has created a major choke point).  I feel bad for the two buyers of those cars, as I am guessing these vehicles were being

I bought out-of-state from CarMax (new car, so couldn’t have it shipped locally). Even though they have locations in PA, they had to send me the documents to then take to a third-party agent for title & registration, then I had to have the car inspected myself. They did cut me a check from the lender for the exact

My grandmother had the 1988 626. Between the oscillating vents, the upshift light for the manual transmission, the velvour like seats, and the automatic seatbelts, I thought it was a cool car as a kid.

You have yet to drive in Rome, I guess. Makes NYC-area drivers look civilized

Maybe that was sales, but their service department nickel and dimes you. I paid $5 for disinfectant they spray at drop-off (it was not noted on any sign, and they didn’t give you a choice) plus they charged you a sub-$1 fee for glass cleaner to remove old inspection stickers.

Even before all of this, Toyota dealers have been notorious for playing games. One wouldn’t even give me the price through the Costco program unless I committed to buying (I was still comparing vehicles at that point). Unfortunately, the dealer I found that was part of CarMax (and was a super easy experience) was sold

Not to mention crazy colors (purple, brown, electric blue)

I can’t imagine how loud that three cylinder engine is at 80 MPH (yes, I have seen drivers in Mirages go that fast).

Two reasons: Mitsubishi dealers tend to target subprime (I see a lot of “any credit” billboards from Mitsubishi dealers in my area), and they are positioned next to used cars (so buyers see that they can get a new car for the same price as a used car, even if the used car has a much better driving experience).

My first new car I got as a freshman in college was a 2004 Mazda3 stick shift. It was small but it was so much fun. I made many trips between college and home with my brother and some of his high school classmates (with the trunk stuffed to the brim with luggage). Sadly it was totaled in a left turn collision two

They were talking about this in 2014 when I was in the market.  I really wanted it given my 60-mile daily round-trip commute.  Looking back, even if it was released back then, the underwhelming mileage would have probably sent me elsewhere anyway.

If you’re lucky enough to find a CarMax-owned new car dealer (there are a few in the Baltimore-DC area that sell Toyota or Honda), the experience is amazing. I had a fair no haggle price within minutes after texting the salesperson I was referred to (by someone on a vehicle specific forum who had traveled from North

It was $99 when I bought my new car from a CarMax owned-dealer last June