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Hero999 said:There's a rainforrest in Canada?
audioguru said:My first car was a '67 Renault 10. Its 1100cc engine was water-cooled in the back. It had 48hp and went 90mph downhill as fast as it can. It cost only $2000 brand new. Manual tranny.
I am a Scrooge. I have always had fuel-efficient cars, all 4 cylinders.mramos1 said:Audioguru must have known gas was going to go up back then, he should have kept the car.
The Renault cars are French, not English but there were many English taxi-cabs with the steering wheel on the other side.And his steering wheel is on the correct side too.
I think the safest (and to my mind, the most fun) is a small front-wheel drive car with a great set of winter tires on the front. With small rims and just the front tires, you can still get the best without coming close to breaking the bank. The back tires can be bald as Kojack - makes no difference in snow on a front-WD. That, fresh snow, and a handbrake? Good times. Good, good times.Torben said:People here (southern Vancouver Island) buy big SUVs so they have 4WD which they think makes it safe to drive in poor weather. Then they wonder why they wrap it around a telephone pole when it snows, even though they have the 4WD on.
About 12 years ago my best friend and I decided that -10 C is the perfect temperature. Now I live in a rainforest where it rarely snows. I miss the snow. It's beautiful and makes the world nice and quiet (it absorbs sound). Plus it's a lot more fun to drive in.
Hank Fletcher said:I think the safest (and to my mind, the most fun) is a small front-wheel drive car with a great set of winter tires on the front. With small rims and just the front tires, you can still get the best without coming close to breaking the bank. The back tires can be bald as Kojack - makes no difference in snow on a front-WD. That, fresh snow, and a handbrake? Good times. Good, good times.
I love the acoustics of snow. If it's about -5 Celsius, about 6" of snow, I love the sound of shovelling. When you throw a shovel load of snow, it makes that awesome muffled "fwooomf" sound! Nothing quite like it. I love the sound of a car engine running in a driveway, lots of fresh snow, heard while sitting in a (preferably well-heated) basement. If the house has siding instead of brick, central heating (gas), and drywall, I could listen to the snow-car-basement sound forever! How's that for particular tastes?!
The ice breaking? While you were on it? Did the ice vibrate?Torben said:the lake he lived on was frozen and bare. We had a great time skating all over it. Ever so often it would give off this crazy thunderlike sound.
audioguru said:The ice breaking? While you were on it? Did the ice vibrate?
Each year here some ice fishermen get stranded on a piece of floating ice and need rescuing.