"I kinda like that body style. contemporary dodges looked sweet"
"I kinda like that body style. contemporary dodges looked sweet"
I would guess "retractable hardtops." You can't design that in without a compromise, and the compromise always shows. See also: SC430, Solara, NC Miata, E-Class convertible....
I will not boat I will not boat I will not boat I will not boat I will not boat I will not boat I will not boat I will not boat I will not boat I will not boat I will not boat I will not boat I will not boat I will not boat I will not boat I will not boat I will not boat I will not boat I will not boat I will not boat…
Can't wait for the companion piece: "Barbers, How Not to Talk to Your Customers."
Two accidents within 8 hours of each other (though not in the same calendar day). CHP report incident numbers differed by 7.
Thank you for that image. Oh man, I love stereotypes.
But then how will people who can't afford cars still buy them? Answer me that, mister smarty economists.
You can get the Merlot vinyl top, but the paint choices with it are limited to "Pâté" and "Maduro"
Just to be on the safe side, I'm not flying Alitalia any time soon.
Bottas might commandeer the "possible robot" title in a few more seasons.
I was referring to putting it in there in the first place as an anti-knock compound. The background to the question did also state, "The best way to judge the character of a person or an organization is how quickly they react to fix those mistakes" so yes, the industry reaction and corrective measures matter as well.
Everyone makes mistakes. Everyone. The best way to judge the character of a person or an organization is how quickly they react to fix those mistakes. It's why anyone of conscience hates the NFL right now. What's the best automotive example of this?
As you can see in the way back of this picture, here's what the car looks like with the top up. And (bonus!) in white.
Certainly the hottest J-Body. But that's like saying that ______ is the hottest _____ . (Gosh, there are just too many similes that work there.)
Some vinyl clapboard siding and liquid nails can turn any late-model GM into its badge-engineered Pontiac equivalent.
All right, I know almost seventeen grand seems a little steep, but where else are you gonna be able to do every step of the "bus driver dance" as a practical exercise? It's easy to find a big steering wheel (even a steeply vertical one), maybe even one with a turning ball mount like this one, and of course the "beep…
It doesn't get more d'elegant than battleship gray.