Rims are just as bad, except for utility vehicles. Utility trucks look fine. That should be the standard. A lot of 60's rims look good.
All regular snap-on hubcaps should be this:
Smooth curved disks painted to match the body.
![Image](http://img268.imageshack.us/img268/489/voltmoondiscs.jpg)
![Image](http://img853.imageshack.us/img853/8228/user12pic16901266998873.jpg)
So you're the type that rides the brake all the way down the mountain?sdfgeoff wrote:Do the brakes of civilian, non racing vehicles need it though? I think not.
Code: Select all
1: Car stopped = Breaks@ 100%
2: Car moving = Breaks @ 0 to .11111% # light tapping or no breaks
3: Car stops = Breaks@ 50% to 100%
4: Go back to 1
Umm yes they do... unless you want to replace your warped rotors and cooked pads every two months.sdfgeoff wrote:Do the brakes of civilian, non racing vehicles need it though? I think not.
As does down shifting.Grendel wrote:Brake systems in electric cars create substancial less heat at the wheels...
I hope you don't break with the clutch...Spidey wrote:As does down shifting.Grendel wrote:Brake systems in electric cars create substancial less heat at the wheels...
So you're going 60 and you need to go 30. If you let "the engine provide the breaking", you put it 4th and let the engine slow your speed. Dude, that's breaking with the clutch. You don't know how to drive a stick.Spidey wrote:the engine provides the braking.
um er um er ummmsdfgeoff wrote:Do the brakes of civilian, non racing vehicles need it though? I think not.
No that's braking with the engine.Isaac wrote:So you're going 60 and you need to go 30. If you let "the engine provide the breaking", you put it 4th and let the engine slow your speed. Dude, that's breaking with the clutch. You don't know how to drive a stick.Spidey wrote:the engine provides the braking.![]()
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People do that when I let them drive my car, they get corrected. They don't do it twice.
http://cars.cartalk.com/content/columns ... er/07.htmlray wrote:Let's take "normal driving" first. It's not the engine that gets takes the brunt of downshifting. It's the clutch that takes the punishment. Think about it. If you shifted up from first gear to fifth and then downshifted all the way back down again, you'd be using your clutch twice as often, and therefore wearing it out twice as fast, right? And a clutch can cost many hundreds of dollars.
My crappy Ford Escort vs your?Spidey wrote:You and me on a race track Isaac, I would eat you alive.