wontacceptthis
wontacceptthis
wontacceptthis

AHA! Cynical humor. Sorry. Yup. Right over my head.

Admitting committing a crime hasn't changed. It's just gotten much easier to do.

I'd venture to say that drivers are inconsiderate and stupid too.

And they do sell shorts that won't chaff your junk, and don't have any name but the maker's on them.

So are drivers. Especially this one.

Minus the spandex of course. You kind of need ball-huggers, but not necessarily fedex ones.


Say no to those seats. I dare you. That ain't pleather, son.

I've moved 11-12,000lbs with 170hp. My brakes and vehicle are rated for it though, so it's all good. Motivating things forward is the least of your worries when towing a heavy load. It's stopping and turning.

Back in the day, you could find 150hp inline 6s in everything from school-buses to dumptrucks. People die

My neighborhood is pretty sweet. The only rules I've ever been aware of being enforced are:

- no unhooked trailers on the street
- all vehicles on the street must be registered

If it's in your driveway or yard, it's whatever. If it gets really bad, it can be a public hazard or something, but that's only if you have a

- No yanking my door open and flexing the sheet metal. Press the button fully, and the door will pop open towards you.
- If you use the vent window, open it in a manner which does not cause a terrible howling.
- If you eat, put all your garbage into a bag so that when you forget it, I don't have to clean all your crap

Lane departure sensors that punch you in the sternum.

My truck disagrees with you. The only thing separating TBI from period MPFI is the fact that there is not one injector per cylinder. Some of the early efforts of MPFI were not sequential, so the charge just pooled at the valve until it opened, much like TBI. Also, TBI and many early MPFI examples shares the exact same

My guess is that the drug exporters probably aren't exactly benefiting Brazil much, what with the "I'll kill you and dump you in the river," and all.

152 mph slant six?

YES PWEASE!

I really admire the work that went into this car. That being said, there is just no way the seller can expect to get his money out of it.

It's like one of those guys who restores vintage lawnmowers or chainsaws . . . yeah, its challenging, and cool, and all, but don't expect to get your money back from it!

This guy is



This :(
Not a car, but it was a 1974 Honda XL175 street and trail bike. It was given to me by my my family's mechanic at age 12 or so. It sat in the shed for years, and I'd pull it out every summer and dump gas into it, run new wires everywhere, and jump on the kickstart like a pogo stick until I turned blue and fell

In El Pennsylvaniao Del Rusto, a Ford in this nice of shape would be going for a similar price.

It's even got a fire extinguisher.

I vote NP, but its not a real NP. Just a reasonable price.

Any of them. They'll all need fixing. You'll spend more money on the same parts with a dodge than anything else, and if its a GM, you'll find more $50 350s to put in it and then blow up repeatedly.

I commend the owner's efforts, but he would have done well to at least straighten out the dents first that wouldn't be covered by the wing.

I want to love it, but I can't love it for more than $800 or so.

The owner should have come out of the store wielding a fish, and slapped a Mr. Harold Cue about his head and neck with it, whilst shouting, "It's my $20 flounder, and I'll do whatever I want!"

Pizza delivery! If only Domino's still had the 30 minutes or less guarantee.

I think by stating it was a mile away, he meant that the van was captured on film a mile a way, while directly in front of the tavern. I don't think it was a mile-long image.