gris posting

Started by Ozmiander, November 07, 2020, 07:16:22 PM


tawd

Quote from: Ozmiander on November 07, 2020, 07:16:22 PM
https://buffalo.craigslist.org/cto/d/basom-03-silverado-62k-miles/7226470209.html

https://buffalo.craigslist.org/cto/d/lewiston-02-nissan-frontier/7225986815.html

https://buffalo.craigslist.org/cto/d/buffalo-2004-honda-odyssey-ex-bo/7225288676.html

That honda looks like it could be cool with a little love.   Or dat frontier if its AWD

(Clarance is also like a rich snooty amhersty part of town rather than being a shitty crusty ghetto part of town or a redneck part of town)

https://buffalo.craigslist.org/cto/d/clarence-2005-hyundai-santa-fe-no-rust/7226859645.html

This had me curious but it was too far for me to bike to.

Sanborn is like rich people farmers or rednecks but near the city of the falls/falls county trash/redneckyness

Clarence is like a rich amherst-ish stuck up private school kids part of town
carpetdime

Ozmiander

If winter is your worry for wanting AWD, it's not going to help you at all, unless you get stuck in a ditch, lol.

tawd

winter is my worry for getting through areas that haven't been plowed yet and because every time i've been in AWD taking it around 15-25-35mph i've felt more secure on the road with AWD than FWD.  I've only tried RWD once in icy/snowy conditions and it was so slippery I'd rather walk than drive something RWD even with 2 inches of snow on the ground.   I am firmly against RWD for anything I'd drive anywhere it snows at all even a little bit, ever. 
carpetdime

Ozmiander

Quote from: tawd on November 07, 2020, 08:34:33 PM
winter is my worry for getting through areas that haven't been plowed yet and because every time i've been in AWD taking it around 15-25-35mph i've felt more secure on the road with AWD than FWD.  I've only tried RWD once in icy/snowy conditions and it was so slippery I'd rather walk than drive something RWD even with 2 inches of snow on the ground.   I am firmly against RWD for anything I'd drive anywhere it snows at all even a little bit, ever.

FWD  = Doesn't turn
RWD = Turns too much

The real difference is having snow tires.