The permanently mounted camper transformed the Jimmy. Once you Casa Grande’d a Jimmy, you never go back, as the saying goes.
The permanently mounted camper transformed the Jimmy. Once you Casa Grande’d a Jimmy, you never go back, as the saying goes.
The permanently mounted camper transformed the Jimmy. Once you Casa Grande’d a Jimmy, you never go back, as the saying goes.
The post Get Crazy Clearance Pricing on Legit Mickey Thompson Off-Road Tires Right Now appeared first on The Drive .
Lug nut patterns are important to keep track of if you want to fit a new tire on your wheels. There are a few different ways you can measure them.
Cameras are being used more widely than ever; it's high time we laid some ground rules on their functionality The BMW 7 Series I’m currently testing shows how it should be done: it’s a big car and use of digital cameras really helps you to deal with its bulk. I’m sure it was BMW that first offered the plan-perspective parking aid which it now calls Surround View. It’s a composite image, delivered as if you were hovering about 30 feet above the roof of the car, in order that you know you’ve parked perfectly in the centre of the bay you’re aiming at without getting out to check. It’s a little bit of genius, digital technology enabling a perspective you couldn’t get any other way – and proof positive that cameras do have their place on new cars. A lot of the digital camera technology that I find in new cars isn’t nearly so clever, however. Since cameras seem to be being used ever more widely and are now even influencing things like big-picture vehicle design, it’s high time we lay some ground rules. Simple rules that you might not imagine needed stating at all, although they clearly do. Rules like: do the cameras in question actually work in the first place? Are they adding something or just doing a second-rate job at replacing something? And are they fit for the intended purpose to which they are put and the best way to achieve that purpose? A camera system that makes parking so much easier satisfies such tests at a stroll. So does one that can make the bonnet of an off-roader seem to disappear, in order that you can drive over obstacles and through ditches with more confidence. Or a wireless one that you can attach to the underside of a car or the back of a trailer (anyone remember the L322-generation Range Rover’s VentureCam? Scarily, it’s nearly a 20-year-old idea). But I have yet to test a digital rear-view or door ‘mirror’ that would pass any of those bars. The first such ‘mirror’ that I tried was on a Range Rover Evoque . I liked it, on an idyllic test route in the Peloponnese. It was supplementary, not a substitution, so you could easily use the real mirror instead. You certainly got a wider view of the road behind in camera mode and a brighter one for use at night. When I drove an Audi E-tron with digital door ‘mirrors’ a few years later, however, I discovered the dirty truth: a low sun caused lens flare and road grime built up on the lens itself, exposed as it was at a fairly road-adjacent level. The system was all but useless in murky, wintry conditions. Particular camera placement can be a problem in other respects too. If they sit too close to the side of the car, such as on the Lotus Evija , the image they produce is filled with bodyside and not enough of the road behind. That’s annoying. Furthermore, digital ‘mirrors’ can’t yet replicate the parallax effect: the ability we all have to make the effective surface area of any mirror larger and to judge distances within it by simply moving our vantage point relative to it. On a video screen, you get the same view of what’s behind you no matter how you move your head. You also have to actually focus on the screen, rather than on the object in the mirror, to use it, which can be a problem for those who wear glasses to drive. In light of all that, should car designers really be reconfiguring vehicle bodies from a clean sheet, often removing useful ‘through-vehicle’ visibility in the process (have you ever noticed how much of your forward view in heavy motorway traffic depends on what you can see through the glasshouse of the car in front?), on the basis of the performance of camera technology that simply isn’t good enough? You can probably guess what I think. One day, these systems might be clever enough to track the position of your eyes; to keep themselves free of grime; and to compose some perfect image of the road behind us, in the way that the current 7 Series can of the particular parking space it’s in. Until then, I will take good old-fashioned mirrors and plenty of glass, please.
Engines with 16 cylinders are pretty rare. To help you understand why these engines aren't more common, here are the pros and cons of a 16-cylinder motor.
With all the hoopla that surrounds the Chevy Corvette these days, it's hard to remember the days seven decades ago when it was an endangered species.
Hopefully BMW implements learnings from the Neue Klasse iX3 for the gas X3's refresh, because as the car sits I cannot recommend it over its strong competition.
It might take a shoehorn, but Abarth wants a more powerful gas Fiat 500
Spark plugs are essential components for gas engines. However, these parts are often misunderstood. Here are the top spark plug myths that deserve to die.
Breather bolts are a relatively common modification for Harley-Davidson bikes. Here's what they do and why some enthusiasts choose to install them.
Toyota's Camry sedans are known for being comfortable, safe, and reliable. But how much of that praise reflects in a 2020 model's depreciation after five years?
As necessary as they sometimes are, stickers can be annoying, especially the ones that refuse to come off cleanly or leave stubborn residue behind.
Stainless steel trim on a classic car looks great, so long as you can keep it shining. Here are some tips that you can follow to keep it looking its best.
Pre-auction preview of a cool vintage 1948 White COE turned pickup truck.
"I am who I am and I want to you to see me for my personality," says motorcycle drag racer and open wheel pilot Dystany Spurlock.
As both new and used car prices continue to rise, now is a great time for most Americans to consider ways to save money.