OK, I have my asbestos suit on.
I put an angry Wile E Coyote sticker on the passenger rear side window, and a Coyote riding an ACME rocket on the drivers side.
I'm a child, I've learned to cope with it.
Since I got the Mustang I've been really impressed at the user friendliness of the various driver systems.
Most are intuitive and quick to access. And you can often use real buttons.
When I went to change daylight saving time yesterday, I was expecting to have to go into multiple menus, as on...
I've seen a test review of the Euro S650 10 spd. Theirs are 36hp down on our GT's, but it did 100 - 200 kmh in 10.7. Their reviewer said he considered anything 10 secs or better to be a quick car.
I reckon full fat Mustangs would get pretty close to 10.
Mine certainly doesn't lack overtaking grunt.
No extra cost for mods down in 'lil old NZ either.
Unless you make major changes like complete new suspension/brake design or huge power increases over stock. Where you'll need low volume vehicle certification, which isn't a major problem. A supercharger on a Mustang would be fine.
Usually custom mode = Normal, Sport exhaust, sport steering, TC/ESC on
When I'm feeling lazy = Normal mode, quiet or normal exhaust depending on time of day, comfort steering.
When I'm doing some "Christian motoring", sport or track mode, TC/ESC off.
Each to their own opinion .
Without trying to be boastful, mine's based on over 750000kms driving cars and bikes on very challenging roads here in NZ and a fair amount of driving in Australia and Italy.
I have had all classes of NZ driver licence, all the heavy vehicle licences, Driver Testing...
I have a Cruz Tools travel kit with basic tools, insulating tape, cable ties, etc. I also take a bike tyre plug kit and my tyre inflator. Never had to use either, so I'll keep taking them.
Not keen on tyre inflator kits. We punctured a tyre while in Italy, miles from anywhere
no cell service...
Good point. There is a spray on anti chip coating for ute trays and underbodies that might do the dampen the sound from metal guards too.
Anyway, I'll see how long the current ones last.
Sorry, but I disagree. Relying on software to save you from yourself is, by definition, someone who has had insufficient training and/or experience to be safe. Not forgetting that safety nannies are not foolproof.
Driving analogue cars for 50 odd years without an accident at all is a pretty damn...
It's often easier to lube the bushings where required. Tighten them a little more than finger tight, then torque to spec when the car is fully on it's wheels.
If you have to drive to a vehicle hoist, then tighten to spec, loosen and retorque
They look good. But still around $NZ200. I'll see how long my homebuilt ones last. I could probably duplicate them in alloy.
Besides, I rarely drive on dirt roads, and only in the wet when we're on a road trip. My wife's car is our daily driver, Mustang stays in the stable.