9.) Jeep Wrangler
9.) Jeep Wrangler
Here are the American averages from 2007-2010 for adults. Notice the average waist is almost 40 inches.
I know, it was super long. Seems like you got lost at the minimum driver weight part. It's not much of a minimum if you add ballast for nonconforming drivers.
Yep, I thought about that; might be why there are no current American F1 drivers.
180 lbs is quite heavy for a 5'5" driver, and is far outside the average weight and height of an adult man (let alone a woman).
I'm just desktop support, Ma'am. Let me put in a request to Networking to see what's going on.
Maybe the switch port on the other end isn't enabled yet?
I'm all for people hacking the things they own; it was decided that jailbreaking your phone is legal, though you can't blame Tesla for not wanting to be on the hook if someone does something dangerous or stupid. Still, with appropriate caveats, it's the man's car and he should be able to tinker as he pleases.
This is something that just about everyone knows, since the number of times that regular human beings go from 0-60 is approximately never. Real speed is acceleration from when you are already rolling, like when you're merging onto a highway, or you're powering out of a turn on some backroad.
Wow. That looks surprisingly similar to a Merc I saw tonight at Lowe's. But I think that was just a GL450.
Thanks!
How did they transport it over there?
Now, where exactly can I find a warehouse like this?
Even better, there's a whole book for this. Which I happen to own as a true Jalop.
What am I looking at here? Yellow seatbelts on a green car?
Britain gave the world the Beatles, the Rolling Stones, V12 Aston Martins and Jaguar's supercharged V8. God Save The Queen indeed.
The Tacoma is made in America. It has been for 10+ years.
Yep, I saw that after I posted that it was dropped mid-model cycle instead of major refresh.
Besides that, since when is there a half-ton Ram with a 5.9-lier V8? Since never, there isn't one. GM cites "manufacturer's press releases" as their source, but they might have meant "thin air."