zekeh
Pickup_man
zekeh

This looks like the perfect use for my 924, too bad there’s no rally cross tracks anywhere near me.

My celebrity encounters aren’t uncool, but I’ll tell them anyway.

It’s already been covered

Smash Melee and Blitz are the only games I’ve played on Game Cube. While everyone else in school was entranced by their Xbox 360's and PS3's with COD and whatever else, we would consistently pack as many people as we could into a dorm room and have Smash parties until someone told us to quite down, at 2 in the

Wired machines aren’t a bad idea, downsides however would be the large cost to install a power point in every single field, creating an industry standard for plugs (although the ag industry is usually better with standards), and the machine would still need to operate wirelessly to move between locations (a battery

I mean, obviously there will be ways to do it, but when your pickup already has a 50 gallon tank of diesel in the bed with an electric pump, a big battery trailer that you have to drive back to get, then wait three hours or more to charge will be seen as very inconvenient.

I know farmers with fields 20+ miles away from home, which is fairly common around where I live. I really like the idea of this, but I don’t see it working well for someone who has to drive it 20 miles, work it all day under load, then either A.) drive it another 20 miles home, or B.) (still very likely) leave it over

I was thinking the same thing, range means jack shit if it’ll only run for 4-5 hours in the field, at which point it dies, 20 miles away from home, with no way to charge it in the field...

Any information on how long it lasts under load? Going 55km is all fine and dandy, but tractors aren’t road vehicles. How long will a charge last while pulling a 50' disk through the ground? Or a 24 row planter? I know that this isn’t easy to figure out because there are tons of variables, but a run time at full load

That’s too bad, the Harley dealer here has an entire row of bikes out front available for test rides at pretty much any time, basically one of every model. The Victory/Indian/everything else dealer has quite a few test models, and all of the used bikes are parked out front all available for rides.

That depends on the dealer, my local Harley dealer was more than happy to let me hop on their newest and baddest bike (Lowrider S), even after I made it very clear that I wasn’t going to purchase a new bike, let alone a Lowrider S. The Victory/Indian/everything else dealer was also more than happy to let me ride a few

I usually open up Pandora to my Chelsea Dagger station. Quite a bit of Fratellis, Franz Ferdinand, Jet, The Strokes, Black Keys, etc. basically Eurorock(?) or whatever you want to call it. Upbeat enough to keep the attitude positive, but not too intense. My station has a tendency to slowly drift towards more and more

That’s because the Tremor didn’t even try to be a sport truck. It was nothing more than an appearance package. The only thing that made it special was that you could get the 3.5EB in the rcsb. If they had put it on a lowered, stiffened up suspension it would have been taken a lot more seriously.

The Tremor was nothing more than an appearance package, not nearly worth what they were asking. If they had lowered it on a stiffened up suspension I’d have taken it a lot more seriously.

I disagree, I think the extended cab 5.5' box looks stubby and dorky, where the 6.5' looks useful and well proportioned.

Can I get an actual statement from Ford as to why they won’t build a SuperCab (extended cab) 6.5' bed version? Seriously, that’s the only thing that’s stopping me from considering a Raptor.

My problem is once I buy a parts car/motorcycle/atv, and take the parts I need, I then start searching Ebay for the parts that I just took, so I can fix the parts machine.

I actually used to work at my local Ace (it was True Value then) and most of the people there now don’t know that. They’re still really helpful, but every time I go in, this is me;

You’re still directly hurting local business owners, but that’s your choice. I agree about the prices, customer service at my local stores has always been great.

Ace Hardware’s are franchises, owned and run by local people, the decisions made in ND were made by the owners of that particular store, not Ace cooperate. Go ahead and continue to support your local store.