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Everything posted by Intrepidation
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GM prepares to announce Pontiac closure
Intrepidation replied to Oracle of Delphi's topic in Heritage Marques
Seems like too many sedans. It should just be Malibu and Impala or Caprice. One FWD and one RWD (the flag ship sedan). -
I rode in a brand new Corolla XLE yesterday
Intrepidation replied to FUTURE_OF_GM's topic in The Lounge
I'm going to politely tell you to screw off, since the Prizm is basically a Corolla. -
I rode in a brand new Corolla XLE yesterday
Intrepidation replied to FUTURE_OF_GM's topic in The Lounge
Define "crappy". If you define them as crappy than the Cavilers were "utter $h!"...which is pretty true. -
Mexico fights swine flu with 'pandemic potential'
Intrepidation replied to Intrepidation's topic in The Lounge
What may makes this one different though is the "normal" flu for the most part it fatal to elderly and young children. This strain killed young to middle aged adults. However, it could very much have to do with Mexico City's health and living conditions (I don't know) since in the US no one has died, and Tamilfu does seem to work. -
I want my future home to have nice landscaping like that. I don't want junk or weeds in it...I want it pretty. I also want it to be set back away from the road with a line of trees obscuring the house and yard from street view. I've thought about this before
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Thank you. I can't wait to get cracking on the conversion. Originally it looked like it was going to be done by my mechanic, but he said I could help out if I wanted...so hell yes of course. Next up are new wheels and tires and a paint job. The a cold ait intake and dual exhaust...in no particular order (wheels and tires probably first, since I need tires anyway). Cost cutting can kiss my ass.
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Ass-Kickin' Engine Of The Day: Chrysler IV-2220 V16
Intrepidation replied to Intrepidation's topic in Chrysler
The P47 looks a hell of a lot better with this engine than the bull-nosed radial, IMHO. -
Our last AKEOTD was a Chrysler-built tank powerplant, and you'd think it would be impossible to surpass a five-bank, 30-cylinder monster… but the IV-2220 airplane engine does just that. It's the very first Chrysler Hemi! The "2220" stands for its displacement in cubic inches (actually, it was 2,219.35 CI, or just over 36 liters). That's right, an engine with well over a cubic foot of displacement. Oh, but it gets even better! More than ten feet in length, hemispherical heads, aluminum block, single overhead cam, inverted-V configuration, and the power was sent to the propeller reduction gear via the middle of the crankshaft (technically, the IV-2220 was two V8s joined in the middle, with an output shaft extending to the propeller beneath the crankshaft). It was developed for installation in the P-47 Thunderbolt during World War II (the P-47, as you may recall, had a godawful complicated remote-turbocharger setup), as an alternative to the P-47s standard Pratt & Whitney radial, and made an impressive 2,500 horsepower. By the time the IV-2220 was ready, however, the war was just about over and jet engines were the flashy new trend for aircraft power. All that effort wasn't wasted, though, because Chrysler had learned a great deal about hemispherical head design, and you know the rest. Jalopnik
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[Updated] Pontiac Officially Dead in 2010 as of 04/27/2009
Intrepidation replied to wildcat's topic in General Motors
Do you listen to yourself sometimes? GM was planning and in the process of killing Zeta long before it asked teh government for help. Stop blaming the government for all of GMs stupid decisions and problems. It gets irritating after a while. -
I rode in a brand new Corolla XLE yesterday
Intrepidation replied to FUTURE_OF_GM's topic in The Lounge
Well there's a surprise, FOG doesn't like a Corolla. I haven't remotely liked them since the `93 -`97 model, and even then I prefer the Prizm (except for a few functional aspects). The masses buy them because the Corolla has long been the stalwart of cheap, practical, economical, and reliable. And hey, you put it up against what the Domestics had to offer up until recently and it was 100% accurate. It earned the reputation and won't soon loose it. -
GM prepares to announce Pontiac closure
Intrepidation replied to Oracle of Delphi's topic in Heritage Marques
The next Malibu should not move back to SWB. The car is already on the small side for interior volume compared to its competition. It should stay the same. There shouldn't be two FWD cars of similar size in the lineup either...that just creates overlap. Either make the Impala RWD, make the W-body fleet only, or just kill it. -
GM prepares to announce Pontiac closure
Intrepidation replied to Oracle of Delphi's topic in Heritage Marques
Also, it's better to have demand out strip supply than supply out strip demand. The W-Body Impala is a fleet whore anyway. -
2 Year's Supply of EXCITEMENT!!!!!!!!
Intrepidation replied to Intrepidation's topic in Heritage Marques
If I were Chrysler I would rebadge the Routan and sell it as an MCE to the Town and Country. It fixes most of the problems with the T&C (better interior, more comfortable seats, better driving dynamics, more interesting front and rear ends). Good way to save money. -
Will do
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You do great work Camino. Very professional and beautiful.
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Well Insignia won car of the year as I recall. The LaCrosse is on a GME engineered platform, the same one as I recall too. The Astra might sell better if GM didn't price it so. Isn't the Corsa good? I dunno there. The problem is that, like the rest of GM< it's taken them until recently to get these products out.
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Well I know who to hire for landscaping
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The G8 GXP is gorgeous. I will admit, from that angle, the G6 looks pretty good too. Pity from other angles it looks so bad.
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Shipping is a real problem, I have headlights on eBay, and an interested buyer from Canada ask me about shipping. It would cost $39.50 which is $5 more than the current price of the actual headlight.
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Friend came buy and we installed some 3M protective film over the area where the clear coat is coming off a little and over the better of the two headlights. Then we took it for a spin and went and bought a couple lottery tickets for fun, then went to the local ice cream shop and got some ice cream. Great way to enjoy a very summer-like evening.
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Just because you and 4 other people won't want to own them doesn't mean they aren't better than most of what we have in NA now.
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Mexico fights swine flu with 'pandemic potential'
Intrepidation replied to Intrepidation's topic in The Lounge
It's also encouraging that it seems to respond to Tamiflu, but it is very discerning how it's made of human, avian, and pig strains and how it managed to get the US. -
MEXICO CITY – A new swine flu strain that has killed as many as 68 people and sickened more than 1,000 across Mexico has "pandemic potential," the World Health Organization chief said Saturday, and it may be too late to contain the sudden outbreak. The disease has already reached Texas and California, and with 24 new suspected cases reported Saturday in Mexico City alone, schools were closed and all public events suspended in the capital until further notice — including more than 500 concerts and other gatherings in the metropolis of 20 million. A hot line fielded 2,366 calls in its first hours from frightened city residents who suspected they might have the disease. Soldiers and health workers handed out masks at subway stops, and hospitals dealt with crowds of people seeking help. The World Health Organization's director-general, Margaret Chan, said the outbreak of the never-before-seen virus is a very serious situation and has "pandemic potential." But she said it is still too early to tell if it would become a worldwide outbreak. "The situation is evolving quickly," Chan said in a telephone news conference in Geneva. "A new disease is by definition poorly understood." This virus is a mix of human, pig and bird strains that prompted WHO to meet Saturday to consider declaring an international public health emergency — a step that could lead to travel advisories, trade restrictions and border closures. Spokesman Gregory Hartl said a decision would not be made Saturday. Scientists have warned for years about the potential for a pandemic from viruses that mix genetic material from humans and animals. Another reason to worry is that authorities said the dead so far don't include vulnerable infants and elderly. The Spanish flu pandemic, which killed at least 40 million people worldwide in 1918-19, also first struck otherwise healthy young adults. This swine flu and regular flu can have similar symptoms — mostly fever, cough and sore throat, though some of the U.S. victims who recovered also experienced vomiting and diarrhea. But unlike with regular flu, humans don't have natural immunity to a virus that includes animal genes — and new vaccines can take months to bring into use. But experts at the WHO and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention say the nature of this outbreak may make containment impossible. Already, more than 1,000 people have been infected in as many as 14 of Mexico's 32 states, according to daily newspaper El Universal. Tests show 20 people have died of the swine flu, and 48 other deaths were probably due to the same strain. The CDC and Canadian health officials were studying samples sent from Mexico, and airports around the world were screening passengers from Mexico for symptoms of the new flu strain, saying they may quarantine passengers. But CDC officials dismissed the idea of trying that in the United States, and some expert said it's too late to try to contain spread of the virus. They noted there had been no direct contact between the cases in the San Diego and San Antonio areas, suggesting the virus had already spread from one geographic area through other undiagnosed people. "Anything that would be about containing it right now would purely be a political move," said Michael Osterholm, a University of Minnesota pandemic expert. Mexican President Felipe Calderon said his government only discovered the nature of the virus late Thursday, with the help of international laboratories. "We are doing everything necessary," he said in a brief statement. But the government had said for days that its growing flu caseload was nothing unusual, so the sudden turnaround angered many who wonder if Mexico missed an opportunity to contain the outbreak. "Why did it break out, where did it break out? What's the magnitude of the problem?" pizzeria owner David Vasquez said while taking his family to a movie Friday night, despite warnings to stay out of theaters. Beginning in late March, when the flu season usually starts to taper off, health officials began recording a spike in cases — three times the normal number. On April 16, Assistant Health Secretary Mauricio Hernandez noted "an unusual transmission period" of regular, seasonal flu. Starting two days later, health teams were sent to hospitals looking for patients with severe flu or pnuemonia-like symptoms. They noticed something strange: The flu was killing people aged 20 to 40, though flu victims are either infants or the elderly. This Wednesday, Hernandez said testing was being carried out in Mexican labs, and hospitals were alerted to watch out for cases. But testing at Mexican labs did not alert doctors to the new strain — even though U.S. authorities had detected cases in California and Texas by April 19. Mexico City Health Secretary Dr. Armando Ahued said it wasn't until mid-afternoon Thursday that authorities received a call "from the United States and Canada, the most important laboratories in the field, telling us this was a new virus." "That was what led us to realize it wasn't a seasonal virus ... and take more serious preventative measures," federal Health Secretary Jose Cordova said. Across Mexico's capital, residents reacted with fatalism and confusion, anger and mounting fear at the idea that their city may be ground zero for a global epidemic. Authorities urged people to stay home if they feel sick and to avoid shaking hands or kissing people on the cheeks. Outside Hospital Obregon in the capital's middle-class Roma district, a tired Dr. Roberto Ortiz, 59, leaned against an ambulance and sipped coffee Saturday on a break from an unusually busy shift. "The people are scared," Ortiz said. "A person gets some flu symptoms or a child gets a fever and they think it is this swine flu and rush to the hospital." He said none of the cases so far at the hospital had turned out to be swine flu. Jose Donasiano Rosales, 69, got nervous on the subway and decided to get out one stop early. "I felt I couldn't be there for even one more station," Donasiano said as he set up a rack to sell newspapers on a busy thoroughfare. "We're in danger of contagion. ... I'm worried." The local Roman Catholic Church recommended that priests shorten Mass; place communion wafers in worshippers' hands, instead of their mouths; and ask parishioners to avoid kissing or shaking hands during the rite of peace. The Archdiocese also said Catholics could fulfill their Mass obligation by radio. Ahued, the capital's health secretary, said Mexico City may not be the epicenter of the outbreak — and could be appearing to the brunt simply because it is home to the most sophisticated medical centers. "The country's best health care facilities are concentrated in the city," he said. "All the cases here get reported, that's why the number is so high." The same virus also sickened at least eight people in Texas and California, though there have been no deaths north of the border, puzzling experts at the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. A "seed stock" genetically matched to the new swine flu virus has been created by the CDC, said Dr. Richard Besser, the agency's acting director. If the government decides vaccine production is necessary, manufacturers would need that stock to get started. The CDC says two flu drugs, Tamiflu and Relenza, seem effective against the new strain. Roche, the maker of Tamiflu, said the company is prepared to immediately deploy a stockpile of the drug if requested. Both drugs must be taken early, within a few days of the onset of symptoms, to be most effective. Mexico's Health Secretary Jose Angel Cordova said the country has enough Tamiflu to treat 1 million people — only one in 20 people in greater Mexico City alone — and that the medicine will be strictly controlled and handed out only by doctors. http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090425/ap_on_...a/med_swine_flu
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[Updated] Pontiac Officially Dead in 2010 as of 04/27/2009
Intrepidation replied to wildcat's topic in General Motors
Well the last 2 were cars, the first two were pieces of crap. -
aaaaaaaaaaand the Intrepid's clean. Will save thorough waxing for a cooler, maybe overcast day.