MD Planner
Cyburbian
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That's hilarious. I've always wanted to do that when I'm up there but it scares me too much to take the chance.
Broncos can't swim
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There's a Ford Bronco Floating in a Bay in Maine Because Some Fool Drove Too Far Out [UPDATE: It's Out]
This Ford Bronco has been stuck in a Maine bay for two days after getting caught in high tide.www.thedrive.com
I wonder if LP knows anything about this?
Savannah is the 3rd busiest port in the US...
I particularly love the fact that it's called a RO/RO port (Roll On/ Roll Off). Interesting that Brunswick, GA beats Savannah for RO/RO; they're #2.
Jeep actually lost a court case about the iconic 7-slot grill maybe 10 years ago or so. IIRC, Jeep (nor AMC or Chrysler or Daimler or FCA) never registered that as an actual and American General/GM put a similar grill on one of their Hummer models. Jeep sued but lost the case because of the lack of an official registered trademark and because of the shared corporate history of American General and Jeep (both of which could trace their roots to Kaiser Jeep.
One of my favorite spots to fish is in that picture. I always see someone get stuck out there. I am not sure exactly what happens across the New River but I enjoy seeing the occasional Osprey and other marine aircraft fly over and hearing the occasional explosion.When I lived in NC I would take my Jeep out on to the sand on Onslow Beach on the Marine Corps base. We also had the option of going onto the beach on Topsail Island, which was just south of Onslow Beach, across the New River. I went onto Topsail one time but didn't care for it as the way the river emptied into the ocean made the beach much less stable, especially as you got closer and closer to the river.
Topsail is on the left of this photo, and Onslow Beach and Camp Lejeune are on the right
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One day in '03 or '04 a couple friends and I had driven down quite a ways on Onslow Beach and were enjoying the sun and the water and noticed a lot of people venturing even further down the beach and then watched a 6x6 MK36 wrecker head down there as well. We decided to leave our Jeeps and walk over to see what was up. When we got to where the beach ends at the river we could see across to the other side and some a55hat in a lifted red Chevy Silverado had gotten their truck stuck in the middle of the river and there were a couple of tow trucks on the far side that had obviously failed in their attempt to winch him back to shore. Apparently the driver was on the Onslow Beach side and noticed what seemed like an exceptionally low tide and decided his truck on 37" flotation tires could make it across. He wasn't wrong! Unfortunately he was unable to make it back (I don't know why he had to tempt fate and didn't just drive the long way around instead, but hey...) and his truck got stuck in the slowly rising tide and just dug itself deeper and deeper in.
The MK36 was able to drive quite a ways out into the water and got the truck out pretty easily. Just in time for PMO to arrive on the beach and arrest the driver of the truck.
One of my favorite spots to fish is in that picture. I always see someone get stuck out there. I am not sure exactly what happens across the New River but I enjoy seeing the occasional Osprey and other marine aircraft fly over and hearing the occasional explosion.
I had a Pacer in college. Ugly as three day old sin but handled pretty well.This sale would take a very specific type of enthusaist - an all original 1978 AMC Pacer DL
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Got to admit, it's pretty neat, theoretically.
So how much did you talk them down to?Uh oh...found an intriguing classic Toyota for sale in my region - 1990 Camry wagon for $4,999
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@RandomPlanner @The Terminator @Planit @dw914er @Doohickie
Unfortunately, I'm not in the market for another car. If I was, I would likely check it out just in case.So how much did you talk them down to?
Oooh, interesting!Uh oh...found an intriguing classic Toyota for sale in my region - 1990 Camry wagon for $4,999
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@RandomPlanner @The Terminator @Planit @dw914er @Doohickie
This dealer is on my commute, so as I drove by this morning I craned my head to see if I could stop this particular longroof, but alas I didn't see it from that vantage point.It looks like it's been sitting there for a minute unless your town is still covered in snow.
I bought a new Ford Escape in 2001 and less than a year in, one of the running lamps blew. I replaced it and it blew again, immediately. So I took it to the dealership. But since the Escape was brand new to the world, they didn't have an easy fix to this problem. They gave me an $1100 estimate to replace the entire front clip of the vehicle in order to stop the bulb from blowing -- and that wouldn't be covered under warranty.I just want to say that Subaru designed the worst headlight assembly possible to replace a burnt out bulb yourself in a 2014 Outback. You can't disassemble it from the front, you can't disassemble it from the top portion that is covered by the hood. Nope, nope, nope. Turn your wheel inward, unfasten the plastic wheel well cover (good luck with those plastic grommet things), pull back and hold the cover while sliding your arm through the gap to reach the back of the headlight assembly, turn the circular cover with a rubber gasket a quarter turn to the left to remove, unhook the paperclip doohickie that keeps the bulb and it's wires in place and then pull the bulb out and replace it. The dealer mechanic has to do the same thing-no other way. Thankfully the rear tail light assembly is a snap.
I just want to say that Subaru designed the worst headlight assembly possible to replace a burnt out bulb yourself in a 2014 Outback. You can't disassemble it from the front, you can't disassemble it from the top portion that is covered by the hood. Nope, nope, nope. Turn your wheel inward, unfasten the plastic wheel well cover (good luck with those plastic grommet things), pull back and hold the cover while sliding your arm through the gap to reach the back of the headlight assembly, turn the circular cover with a rubber gasket a quarter turn to the left to remove, unhook the paperclip doohickie that keeps the bulb and it's wires in place and then pull the bulb out and replace it. The dealer mechanic has to do the same thing-no other way. Thankfully the rear tail light assembly is a snap.
Here here!Never buy the first generation of a car. Let other people figure out the problems and then buy a model a couple years later. Fewer problems.
That's the crazy thing, there's enough space that they could have designed it with easy access at least on the driver's side. From what I understand they changed this design in 2015 with the 5th generation model; mine was the last year of the 4th gen. I've loved the car, it's easy to drive and apart from the pesky headlight bulb changes it's been trouble free for the 8 years I've owned it. I wish it got a bit better gas mileage but it's certainly not bad.My wife's Chevy Traverse has the same type of headlamp assembly. It really bugs me because when you pop the hood, there is clearly enough space that they could have made it possible to reach in, twist the bulb to pop it out, and quickly inset the new one.
I remember when I first had to change one in her vehicle a few years back I posted a short rant about the ordeal on my Facebook page with the gist of it being something about me wanting to punch the responsible designer or engineer in the throat. I only have about 50 Facebook friends, but this being Detroit, it only took about 20 minutes for one of my friends to link my post to one of their friends who was friends with one of the actual designers. I thought that was pretty funny.
Two further notes:
- GM had a significant stake in Subaru before selling it off to Toyota about 10 or 15 years ago. For a while there was quite a bit of shared design and components on some of the vehicles so it's possible your crappy Subaru design is one of those remnants. (Thankfully though the Traverse uses torx head screws to hold the wheel well covers in place and not the plastic grommets which can break so easily.)
- Too late now, but if you ever have to do it again, one tip is to grab a bungee cord, feed it through one of the spokes on the wheel, and then hook the ends to the plastic wheel well cover to hold it back while you work.
Exactly this. This is why I bought a 15 year platform in my 2021 Tundra, rather than the redesigned 2022.Never buy the first generation of a car. Let other people figure out the problems and then buy a model a couple years later. Fewer problems.
Had a 1985 Tempo GL in high school (dad's car but I drove it often) and mine was not bad. Had the 5 speed and two-door "Sport" package. Thankfully, this model did not have the door mirrors in the middle of the door but at the front corner where a mirror is supposed to be located.Yep. I bought a 1984 Ford Tempo. Now the Tempo was never a great car, but 1984 was the first full model year (they started as a 1983.5 with limited production). I wish I'd gone with the tried-and-true, if slightly smaller, Escort. (The Tempo was eventually replaced by an Escort wagon.)
Mine looked almost exactly like the bottom picture, although it wasn't a GLX, just a GL, so no body molding and stuff. That looks like a tan metallic; might was a lighter tan and not metallic.Had a 1985 Tempo GL in high school (dad's car but I drove it often) and mine was not bad. Had the 5 speed and two-door "Sport" package. Thankfully, this model did not have the door mirrors in the middle of the door but at the front corner where a mirror is supposed to be located.
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I've been looking for an older model Tacoma with 4WD and manual tranny. Found one about an hour away Friday night - price was perfect, mileage a little high, but okay. Thought about texting the dealer to see if it was still available, but thought, nah, they'll just pollute my phone with texts. I'll drive over there and, if I like it, buy it outright. So I head out into a wicked rainstorm (wipers on high and I could still barely see) and, after a little unplanned tourism, I locate the dealer. Walk inside and a salesman is on me like stink on sh!t, and I ask to see the truck. Oh, that was a typo, it's an automatic.
So, so, freaking bummed.
I hate trucks these days. My favorite was an older '90s dodge I had. No extended king crew cab crap. Bench seat, stick shift, extra long bed. The only downside was manual crank windows. It's hard to reach that passenger window. That and I love those triangle windows. Trucks these days can't even fit half a sheet of drywall in them anymore. What's the point?there go your algorithms too
I really miss the small truck options - those F150's are crazy - the only new small truck out there right now is the Jeep one
Watch out for the fatal frame rust problem on the 2005-2010 Tacomas.I've been looking for an older model Tacoma with 4WD and manual tranny. Found one about an hour away Friday night - price was perfect, mileage a little high, but okay. Thought about texting the dealer to see if it was still available, but thought, nah, they'll just pollute my phone with texts. I'll drive over there and, if I like it, buy it outright. So I head out into a wicked rainstorm (wipers on high and I could still barely see) and, after a little unplanned tourism, I locate the dealer. Walk inside and a salesman is on me like stink on sh!t, and I ask to see the truck. Oh, that was a typo, it's an automatic.
So, so, freaking bummed.
Thanks for the heads-up - I wasn't aware of this issue. I was indeed looking at a 2009. Forewarned is forearmed, as they say.Watch out for the fatal frame rust out problem on the 2005-2010 Tacomas. You don't want to walk into that mess. My brother had to deal with this ~2 years ago on his 2007. He fixed the fatal rust, but dumped it right away after the repair and bought a new 2019 Tacoma instead.
Nice! I had my first Lucid Air sighting in the wild a couple of weeks ago. It wasn't here in town, but still, I was excited to see it.The Lucid Air - 1st one I've seen out in the wild
Definitely a chick magnet ya got thereMy new car:
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Hey, it's a 'runner'My new car:
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Really needs these
I REALLY can't stand when people relocate the mirrors to the hood on 240s. Its TACKY. Were talking Swedish Bricks not a JDM Toyota Crown or a 70s Datsun. The stock mirror locations are just fine, on the hood it looks silly.Hey Terminator, I found something for you!
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The LS-Swapped Drift 1989 Volvo 240 DL of Your Dreams Is on Craigslist
V8 manual sedans are a dying breed, unless you go make your own.www.thedrive.com
TRUE!I REALLY can't stand when people relocate the mirrors to the hood on 240s. Its TACKY. Were talking Swedish Bricks not a JDM Toyota Crown or a 70s Datsun. The stock mirror locations are just fine, on the hood it looks silly.
My wife's car was getting increasingly worse road noise. I noticed when I parked it that the inside portion of the left front wheel was bald. So Friday I put some new tires on- Bridgestone Turanzas which are billed as having very low road noise. So far they live up to the billing; it feels like a new car again.
By the way: we got 73,000 miles on the original set![]()
My wife's car was getting increasingly worse road noise. I noticed when I parked it that the inside portion of the left front wheel was bald. So Friday I put some new tires on- Bridgestone Turanzas which are billed as having very low road noise. So far they live up to the billing; it feels like a new car again.
By the way: we got 73,000 miles on the original set![]()
Schedule a front end alignment or your new tires will be ruined in short order.
Already scheduled for this Friday at 8:30 am.Schedule a front end alignment or your new tires will be ruined in short order.
I don't know why but I'm planning to replace my front rotors and pads tomorrow evening. This is a job best left to the weekend but for some reason I have it in my head that I can bang it out after work tomorrow. And I just KNOW something is going to go wrong and I'll have to run back to the parts store and be out there using a work light but I'm doing it anyway. Why would I put this kind of pressure on myself?
If you've done it yourself on that car before, no problem, 30 minute job.I don't know why but I'm planning to replace my front rotors and pads tomorrow evening. This is a job best left to the weekend but for some reason I have it in my head that I can bang it out after work tomorrow. And I just KNOW something is going to go wrong and I'll have to run back to the parts store and be out there using a work light but I'm doing it anyway. Why would I put this kind of pressure on myself?