zuramaru29
NicoZura
zuramaru29

My dad would've been looking with me.

Please just don't do this...

Union, NJ.

My first instinct was a Chevy Cobalt coupe, because I immediately saw my car. Possibly the sedan variant?

Pontiac Sunfire GXP Concept. I had no idea this thing existed, much less why it existed.

I know I was floored when I learned about the Mazda RX500

Roma Circuit backwards?

Hey look! It's a Zed 06.

I can picture people calling the Hurracan the "Hurricane" and it makes my head hurt.

No, not quite that pronunciation. But they botch both the manufacturer and model.

I've heard many call it Poo-Jee-Ott, which actually more resembles a Pokemon name than the actual pronunciation of the vehicle brand.

Renault Mégane to the Americans. Lots of them don't understand the French (edit: pronunciation).

My first time driving in heavy snow was when I went to a college visitation in WV. Driving from Jersey my dad took the first leg where it was mostly slush. We stop in western Maryland and I take over. Get into the mountains on I67W and it turns into a full-on blizzard. I don't panic, but my mom wants me to pull over.

In a perfect world it would be eliminated. I'm not naive enough to believe it would go away, but it is a terrible thing to do in the snow.

It's probably been said before me, but tailgating. The act of tailgating is dangerous in optimal conditions, but add snow into the mix and it's a recipe for disaster—considering those who are afraid of or uninitiated to snow driving's first instinct is to brake, brake, brake. Keeping a safe following distance also

I'm a big fan of Sheetz. They run from Pennsylvania out west to Ohio and West Virginia, and southward to Virginia and North Carolina and found along most Interstates within those regions. Sheetz has all you need from a travel stop: gasoline fill-ups, clean bathrooms (with condom vending machines!), top notch coffee,

My grandma literally drove a first and second gen Taurus. She was not a gearhead or a good driver by any means, but she did own them and drive them.

Haha, noted.

I like the progression of the Ford Taurus. It was a capable car at first, but something my grandma drove. It has evolved into a lustworthy vehicle.

I'm going to say Prius, only for what precedent is set by being the first mass produced hybrid vehicle in 1997. Hybrid technology has been expanded so much that it is now being used in high performance sport cars and even some super cars. Hybrids aren't just the slow, plodding, commuter appliances anymore.