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Small Cars, Fast Cars And The Cars With The Worst Drivers In This Week's QOTD Roundup

Small Cars, Fast Cars And The Cars With The Worst Drivers In This Week's QOTD Roundup

Yahoo15-02-2025
Supercars can go so much faster than they could ever legally go on an American public road for as long as there have been supercars, so what's the point in continuing to raise the top speed? Do you really need to be able to go faster than 85 miles per hour at all, anyway? Earlier this week we asked our readers to tell us what speed they felt was 'too fast' for a car, and the answers did not disappoint. We put together a few of our favorite answers below for your perusal. - Bradley Brownell Read More
Over the last decade automakers have axed many of their smaller cars, opting to go for giant vehicles with expansive profit margins. Small cars may be set to make a return as automakers inflation makes us more broke than ever. So now, we just need to figure out what models need to come back. - Lawrence Hodge Read More
In light of the recent news that General Motors has built a Corvette with a 233 mile per hour top speed, I figured it was a good time to ask you all where you draw the line. The engineering behind the new Corvette ZR1 is pretty incredible, I'll give General Motors a slap on the back for that one. But does a relatively normal guy with good enough credit to get a loan for the $175,000 MSRP really need the ability to travel at 233 miles per hour? It's possible the car can go even faster, because GM says it hit those speeds with the high-downforce ZTK package installed. I think it might be too fast. - Bradley Brownell Read More
If you want to spot a bad driver on the highway, is there a telltale sign that gives them away? You know, something like a tacky bumper sticker, some slight drifting between lanes or maybe copious amounts of damage that shows that the driver doesn't really know what they're doing. According to a recent study, the best way to avoid bad drivers in America is actually to avoid Teslas, as they're the cars that are driven by the country's worst. - Owen Bellwood Read More
Last week we asked you what crossover vehicle you would like to see turned into a rugged body-on-frame SUV, and hilarity ensued. Body-on-frame SUVs ruled the roads by the end of last century, but once automakers began realizing that the most SUV-ish thing that their buyers did was jump a curb or drive down the occasional gravel road. You know what can also withstand those challenges? Anything that's not a sports car, really. But buyers continued to demand commanding seating positions and the security, or perceived security, of four-wheel drive, so carmakers began lifting their car platforms and plopping tall bodies on top of them to make crossovers. In the beginning crossovers were revolutionary, but now they're commonplace and boring. - Logan Carter Read More
We all read Jalopnik, and that means we're some of the best drivers in the world. However, we're not infallible. Sometimes we can make mistakes on the road – especially when winter weather is involved. It just adds another element of randomness and unpredictability to our drive. Lest we forget, everyone else around us becomes worse drivers as well. That idea is what has led me to today's question. - Andy Kalmowitz Read More
Driving through nasty winter weather requires a certain amount of skill and concentration you don't really need driving day to day. The smallest slip up or lapse in judgment can end with pretty disastrous results. Pretty much everyone has a nightmare winter driving experience, but some stick out above the rest. Some are just the worst of the worst. That led me to the question I asked you all last week. - Andy Kalmowitz Read More
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