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If you look at the last photo you can see more re-bar buried in that sand on the right. As for the car being totaled I doubt it, from what can be seen in the photo's it looks like two new seats and a rear window, the mystery is the floor-pan and the drive train.
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# ? Jun 6, 2013 09:52 |
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# ? Apr 27, 2024 15:30 |
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Slavvy posted:I really want to know how this is possible. You read about it, and hear about it, and see those fluff pieces on the news where some geriatric plowed through the front of a gas station, but how does it really happen? How? You have thousands of hours of driving a car, every car is basically the same, your body is as accustomed to where the brake is as it is to wiping your rear end or turning the tap the right way to make water come out. On top of which, you have to hold down the gas for a sustained period of time AND jam it to the floor to get truly spectacular results. I can tell you that if I haven't driven an automatic in a while I will almost certainly jam on the brake pedal looking for a clutch at least once during a trip.
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# ? Jun 6, 2013 10:15 |
8th-samurai posted:I can tell you that if I haven't driven an automatic in a while I will almost certainly jam on the brake pedal looking for a clutch at least once during a trip. Really? How? I've had the same thing happen and all I end up doing is jabbing at the floor where the clutch used to be. Is it just a result of people left-foot-braking all the time because they've only ever driven auto?
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# ? Jun 6, 2013 10:21 |
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Slavvy posted:I really want to know how this is possible. You read about it, and hear about it, and see those fluff pieces on the news where some geriatric plowed through the front of a gas station, but how does it really happen? How? You have thousands of hours of driving a car, every car is basically the same, your body is as accustomed to where the brake is as it is to wiping your rear end or turning the tap the right way to make water come out. On top of which, you have to hold down the gas for a sustained period of time AND jam it to the floor to get truly spectacular results. See, this is why I am not completely against blackboxes in cars for research purposes. But then I realize what I'm implicitly advocating and I die a little each time. I really wish there was mandatory driver's RE-testing every few years to keep your license.
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# ? Jun 6, 2013 10:37 |
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I got a license in Arizona, and it doesn't expire until I'm 60 Even Idaho makes you go in every five years and do a simple (useless, I'm an optician so I know, but it's better than nothing) eye test. I thought it was a joke when people told me.
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# ? Jun 6, 2013 10:49 |
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Slavvy posted:Really? How? I've had the same thing happen and all I end up doing is jabbing at the floor where the clutch used to be. Is it just a result of people left-foot-braking all the time because they've only ever driven auto? Things with wide brake pedals mostly, I just go to clutch and oops got the left side of the brake. Not nearly as big of a deal as oops got the gas though. I know my late grandmother drove automatics with both feet but she didn't get her license until her 60s.
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# ? Jun 6, 2013 10:50 |
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Yeah, I've brake stomped too when in auto rental cars, and I blame the wide brake pedal. It only happens at super low speeds, like in a parking lot. I read some investigation report once about a runaway car, and the gist of it was that the driver was adamant he was pressing the brake (only he was on the throttle). And the more pedestrians he plowed into, the more he pressed the brake. It's especially amplified on relatively high-torque American cars with kick-down. This is an interesting read on the subject: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Russell_Weller
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# ? Jun 6, 2013 11:50 |
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This one will take a sharp eye. (4-wheeler trans for context) There should be engagement dogs on the side of that gear. Don't neutral drop your 4-wheeler kids.
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# ? Jun 6, 2013 13:53 |
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Slavvy posted:I really want to know how this is possible. You read about it, and hear about it, and see those fluff pieces on the news where some geriatric plowed through the front of a gas station, but how does it really happen? How? You have thousands of hours of driving a car, every car is basically the same, your body is as accustomed to where the brake is as it is to wiping your rear end or turning the tap the right way to make water come out. On top of which, you have to hold down the gas for a sustained period of time AND jam it to the floor to get truly spectacular results. Certain vans, because of the width of the doghouse, have the pedals crammed together. Ford Econolines were involved in a spate of those incidents; having driven my dad's various E150 work trucks when helping him out on a job or rearranging cars in the driveway, I'll admit to having accidentally grabbed a bit of the gas while braking once or twice. As to your second point, while I and you would probably notice the engine noise rising, think to ourselves "whoopsie," and shift our foot an inch to the left to remedy the situation, a lot of people think "isn't stopping PRESS HARDER," and then sue Ford. In other news: Remember, lawnmowers need oil changes too!
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# ? Jun 6, 2013 14:49 |
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The people who I saw with their car turtled on a rock were 20s/30s, overweight, balding, and pale. Basically america.jpg I guess. No old-person excuse for being confused about which pedal to use. People are stupid, carry good insurance.
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# ? Jun 6, 2013 15:16 |
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Delivery McGee posted:Certain vans, because of the width of the doghouse, have the pedals crammed together. Ford Econolines were involved in a spate of those incidents; having driven my dad's various E150 work trucks when helping him out on a job or rearranging cars in the driveway, I'll admit to having accidentally grabbed a bit of the gas while braking once or twice. It wasn't an Econoline, but many girlfriends ago I was helping her pick up a dresser she'd bought from a friend. She had borrowed her mom's minivan and taken out all the seats so the only two remaining were the passenger and driver. We had enlisted the help of a third friend who took the passenger seat, so after we picked up the dresser I was just in the back sitting on the floor. Now this girlfriend normally drove a Saturn SL with a five-speed and wasn't used to driving an automatic. To my detriment, at one point she stabbed the brake thinking it was the clutch, causing me to pitch forward at a high rate and smash into the dresser, which promptly fell on top of me. That was fun.
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# ? Jun 6, 2013 16:34 |
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8th-samurai posted:I can tell you that if I haven't driven an automatic in a while I will almost certainly jam on the brake pedal looking for a clutch at least once during a trip. Every. Goddamn. Time. Luckily my parents' new Chrysler minivan doesn't have the insanely wide brake pedal that the Oldsmobile Silhouette had. That's when I accidentally went for the clutch and did a 20-to-0 stop about 300 feet away from a stop sign. In front of a gas station. It was thoroughly embarrassing. I'd also whiff a grab for the gear shift as I was coming up to a stop for the first ten minutes I drove that car.
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# ? Jun 6, 2013 16:43 |
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kastein posted:(ironically, I was on my way to a drivers retraining course. To keep from losing my license. Because of a handful of loving INSPECTION TICKETS from driving a hoopty truck. Did you know inspection tickets counted as a point on your license? I sure didn't.) Massachusetts (where Kastein and I are) is absolutely ridiculous about points on your license. My friend is paying like $2500 a year for insurance now because he got a bunch of stupid tickets and never fought any of them. The registration on his family car was expired because his sister and her felon boyfriend would just park anywhere and then throw away parking tickets. The RMV wouldn't let them do anything with the car with outstanding parking tickets, nor would they tell them what tickets needed to be payed. They ended up calling like half of the towns in MA just to find all the tickets. Anyway he got a ticket for driving an unregistered vehicle and it was like 3 points. He also did some stupid poo poo like turn left coming out a parking lot with a no left turns sign. Basically everything higher than a parking ticket is points in MA.
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# ? Jun 6, 2013 18:08 |
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8th-samurai posted:I can tell you that if I haven't driven an automatic in a while I will almost certainly jam on the brake pedal looking for a clutch at least once during a trip. Muscle memory can definitely gently caress with you. I was out visiting my fiancee and helped her with some moving this weekend, and I rented a U-haul Econoline-type van with the gear selector on the stalk. For the rest of the trip, every once in a while driving her car I would try to put it in reverse and end up getting the windshield really, really clean.
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# ? Jun 6, 2013 20:20 |
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My only real issue when going to an auto is backing up. In a manual I never fully let out the clutch and just kick the clutch pedal in to coast back once I'm going. Doesn't work so well in an auto when I slam to stop trying to coast back.
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# ? Jun 6, 2013 21:47 |
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Opensourcepirate posted:Massachusetts (where Kastein and I are) is absolutely ridiculous about points on your license. My friend is paying like $2500 a year for insurance now because he got a bunch of stupid tickets and never fought any of them. The registration on his family car was expired because his sister and her felon boyfriend would just park anywhere and then throw away parking tickets. The RMV wouldn't let them do anything with the car with outstanding parking tickets, nor would they tell them what tickets needed to be payed. They ended up calling like half of the towns in MA just to find all the tickets. I think I'm at a total of 5 for times stopped and ticketed while having rejected inspection stickers during my younger and dumber days. A few times legitimate other times the shop was looking to fleece my wallet. If you get a Uniform Citation with a $ fine in Assachusetts then your points are going up. Its all or nothing. Go to court and win? Still cost you a $25 fee or another $50 if you don't like magistrate's decision and decide to go in front a judge with the citing officer present. Spirit of America my rear end.
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# ? Jun 6, 2013 22:21 |
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Agreed. You know what really burns my rear end about the last one? I was on my way to the steel shop to get metal to fix the drat rockers so I could get it inspected. Got pulled over, ticketed, officer told me if I appealed it, he'd be there and as long as I had my sticker, he'd say to just toss it out. Guess how much of that happened? Yep, I showed up and some other rear end in a top hat was there, not him, and the magistrate told me to pound sand. I keep my inspection stickers up to date now. PS: I pay a good bit more than that. Mostly due to the inspection tickets, one accident a couple years ago, and the fact that I have 3 vehicles registered. kastein fucked around with this message at 22:58 on Jun 6, 2013 |
# ? Jun 6, 2013 22:51 |
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The Magistrate is just a hearing with a PD representative, you got to appeal to the judge to see the citing officer. Got a ticket for 80+ MPH on 495 last year, went in to the magistrate office last month said I was guilty of everything the State Police rep was saying and that my driving record has been very clean. Magistrate looked at my record and said will cut you a break and checked off NR (Not Responsible) and the Trooper didn't contest .
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# ? Jun 6, 2013 23:35 |
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14 INCH DETECTIVE posted:
You KNOW this is the kind of poo poo we're probably going to find when we finally get around to ripping the subframes out of my car to do all that suspension work and poo poo that I want to do.
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# ? Jun 7, 2013 00:03 |
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Sucks to be you guys. My state has no inspections, no emissions regs, no front plates, and it's in the south so my lawyer's good-old boy network makes tickets disappear. Of course, the downside is that police are nearly completely ineffectual, drunk drivers are everywhere, and EVERY car on the local used market is hosed.
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# ? Jun 7, 2013 00:04 |
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PA is seems to have a happy medium as far as regulations go. We have inspections but the only way you'll fail is if you go to a really picky shop or have a tragically terrible car. Only certain counties have emissions. I've had some really lovely cars that have passed though. It seems to work as far as keeping really unsafe vehicles off the road and doesn't cost that much. Usually $60 for inspection and emission stickers and $30 for registration.
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# ? Jun 7, 2013 00:21 |
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Phy posted:Muscle memory can definitely gently caress with you. I was out visiting my fiancee and helped her with some moving this weekend, and I rented a U-haul Econoline-type van with the gear selector on the stalk. For the rest of the trip, every once in a while driving her car I would try to put it in reverse and end up getting the windshield really, really clean. Ha, yep! Happens to me every time I drive most any other car, since all mine have been on the tree for a few years now. In mechanical failure news: HOLY poo poo http://news.yahoo.com/mechanical-failure-likely-caused-fatal-california-limo-fire-151639652.html Remember that limo with a bridal party that caught fire? They think it was because of: quote:A mechanical failure probably sparked the deadly limousine fire that killed a bride and four of her friends as they crossed a bridge over the San Francisco Bay early last month, local media reported on Thursday. As someone who drives a car with air shocks, and just replace really lovely broken ruptured ones, How could this happen?
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# ? Jun 7, 2013 01:15 |
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This is what a air spring is for Panther looks like. They don't usually burst they normally crack at the base. The fuel tank is near them so maybe something punctured the air spring which caused it to damage the fuel tank. And like Cadillacs they do have a ride height sensor so the compressor doesn't over fill. Cadillacs are just regular shock with a air bladder on it with conventional coil springs whereas the Panther the air spring is what supports the rear of the car in addition to normal shocks. A few years ago Panthers made headlines for ruptured fuel tanks in severe rear collisions, Ford got a lot of flak but really the only ones constantly out on the road in Crown Victoria's is law enforcement so your risk of immolating in regular Panther is low. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eSm6Dnu0EPM KennyLoggins fucked around with this message at 01:40 on Jun 7, 2013 |
# ? Jun 7, 2013 01:32 |
The NHTSA are so precious, thinking jeep will jump and recall millions of ancient vehicles http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887324299104578529041840107114.html
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# ? Jun 7, 2013 01:58 |
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^^^^ All I see in that is the headline... This whole thing is reminding me of Tyler's explanation of the recall decision process in Fight Club. Hell I think it was the same model of car too wasn't it? (different generation)
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# ? Jun 7, 2013 02:05 |
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This is probably the link he meant to post.
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# ? Jun 7, 2013 04:16 |
Das Volk posted:^^^^ All I see in that is the headline... Seems to work perfectly on this pc, that's strange.
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# ? Jun 7, 2013 04:20 |
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So I was delivering a forklift today, and every time I stepped on the clutch it would squeak. I figured it just needed some lube and kept going. Just as I pulled up to the site, something went clunk, and then I had no clutch. Upon further inspection: The weld holding the pin in broke and the squeaking was the sound of it slowly working its way out. I'm just glad it happened when I was going slowly, instead of, say, on the freeway I just got off. Then we got to do this: Flatbed on a flatbed! Bonus picture of the gash I got fixing that clutch pedal, after it slipped out and hit me in the forehead:
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# ? Jun 7, 2013 06:15 |
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Das Volk posted:^^^^ All I see in that is the headline... Here's Allpar http://www.allpar.com/news/index.php/2013/06/behind-the-nhtsa-request TL;DR: 2 people died in the back seat of a parked 20 year old Jeep that was rear ended by an 18-wheeler at 65mph(driver and 2 other occupants of the vehicle survived). NHTSA now wants Chrysler to recall millions of Jeeps built in the last 20 years. Chrysler says the Jeeps are no more likely to catch fire/cause fatality in a rear end collision than any other car built during that era and in any case they met all applicable safety regulations at the time of manufacture, we're not going to recall a 20 year old truck to retrofit it to some new standard that you just came up with today.
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# ? Jun 7, 2013 07:12 |
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A stationary 20 year old vehicle gets ploughed by a truck going 65mph and they're not singing its praises that some passengers survived? For once I think Chrysler are absolutely right, if it passed all of the safety standards in place at the time then they're not required to do any more. If there's a flaw in the safety regulations then every vehicle built to them should be recalled at the same time, singling out one or two models retroactively sets a horrible precedent.
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# ? Jun 7, 2013 10:07 |
jammyozzy posted:A stationary 20 year old vehicle gets ploughed by a truck going 65mph and they're not singing its praises that some passengers survived? You've yet to learn the art of media assassination. See: Corvairs in the 60's/70's, Audi in the 80's, Toyota a couple of years ago.
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# ? Jun 7, 2013 10:10 |
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Are they just...bored or something?
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# ? Jun 7, 2013 12:18 |
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KennyLoggins posted:A few years ago Panthers made headlines for ruptured fuel tanks in severe rear collisions, Ford got a lot of flak but really the only ones constantly out on the road in Crown Victoria's is law enforcement so your risk of immolating in regular Panther is low. Yeah, Crown Vics got a bad rap because a lot of them took a truck up the rear end at 80 per. But it was more because any car would explode from that kind of hit and 99/100 of cars parked on the side of the interstate were Crown Vics, than the Pinto II situation that the news made it out to be. Grumbletron 4000 posted:PA is seems to have a happy medium as far as regulations go. We have inspections but the only way you'll fail is if you go to a really picky shop or have a tragically terrible car. Only certain counties have emissions. I've had some really lovely cars that have passed though. And even if you don't bother, the cops will usually just give you a warning unless you're egregiously ridin' dirty and/or Mexican. Between myself and coworkers/friends, I have been party to four stops for expired reg/inspection. Two of them resulted in tickets, and those two were by the same city PD who have nothing better to do. State and county just said "Looks like you forgot to renew. Get that taken care of, okay?" Chillbro Baggins fucked around with this message at 14:45 on Jun 7, 2013 |
# ? Jun 7, 2013 14:31 |
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Astroman posted:http://news.yahoo.com/mechanical-failure-likely-caused-fatal-california-limo-fire-151639652.html Read that article again, closely. My guess : excess avoirdupois
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# ? Jun 7, 2013 14:39 |
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EKDS5k posted:So I was delivering a forklift today, and every time I stepped on the clutch it would squeak. I figured it just needed some lube and kept going. Just as I pulled up to the site, something went clunk, and then I had no clutch. Upon further inspection: Sup Vancouver buddy. That's near where I live. I believe that street is also where a TransLink bus did this:
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# ? Jun 7, 2013 15:07 |
Delivery McGee posted:As has been mentioned, Texas really only requires working lights, horn, and windshield wipers; windshield itself is not an inspection item, but you have to have wipers flapping over the hole -- I knew a guy in the Jeep club who rolled his truck and got it inspected with no glass, but they did check the wipers. And if you Know A Guy, you can get pretty much anything passed. And parking brakes, don't forget those. I have a $500 repair bill to make sure I never do. But yeah I know people who have a set of super cheap yet new "inspection wipers" which they switch onto the car to pass inspection then take off immediately after because the very small little nick 1" from the edge of their expensive wipers doesn't bother them yet would cause them to fail inspection.
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# ? Jun 7, 2013 15:29 |
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Throatwarbler posted:Here's Allpar In aviation, that would be an airworthiness directive for the entire fleet to be retrofit.
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# ? Jun 7, 2013 16:25 |
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PatrickBateman posted:In aviation, that would be an airworthiness directive for the entire fleet to be retrofit. Yes, but a 20 year old airframe is still considered pretty young.
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# ? Jun 7, 2013 19:32 |
Safety Dance posted:Yes, but a 20 year old airframe is still considered pretty young. And a jeep cherokee didn't cost millions of dollars to build nor was it painstakingly assembled by master craftsmen to the highest standards and intended to operate for decades. It was thrown together by slack-jawed yokels for the lowest cost possible, to arbitrary standards accepted only grudgingly and intended to last for the duration of the warranty period.
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# ? Jun 7, 2013 23:24 |
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# ? Apr 27, 2024 15:30 |
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If the same quality assurance and inspection standards applied to your car as they did a commercial aircraft, they would never allow us to drive.
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# ? Jun 8, 2013 00:10 |