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Sold my 'summer' car because of my bike...

Posted: Thu Sep 24, 2009 6:53 pm
by gsus
It seems that my bike took a lot of the fun out of my summer car, 91 Toyota MR2... So much so, that I just sold it today- and now I'm in search for a more practical daily driver/bad weather car (thinking of a VW GTI), for when I'm not or cannot be on the bike. Am I alone? Or did some of you find a way to keep both (car & bike) just as fun?

Posted: Thu Sep 24, 2009 10:24 pm
by JC Viper
I'm lucky to have decent public transit for those winter messes that are un-rideable. That being said I do have a car that's shared between me and my bro and I used to have a daily driver Celica but I'm converting it into a street legal Rally car.

I'd rather take the bike, parking is a pain in the butt here which means my bro can have the car 95% of the time. All I ever use it for is late night drive thru...

Posted: Thu Sep 24, 2009 11:51 pm
by CamSA
I keep an old BMW 316 as my winter car and ride around, driving 30 km on the freeway here takes you an hour and a half its so congested. My KDX is fitted for on road so instead of using the cruisher daily, I use the KDX at least I can mount a pavement which is necessary when or local taxis decide to make a 2 lane a 4 lane road (which is every day) at peak hour tracffic

Posted: Fri Sep 25, 2009 12:17 am
by Gummiente
CamSA wrote:I keep an old BMW 316 as my winter car
Pardon my ignorance of your country, but... winter?... in South Africa? :dunno:

Posted: Fri Sep 25, 2009 3:56 am
by Johnj
They have four seasons down under. Their winter is our summer and so on. It's spring in South Africa.

Posted: Fri Sep 25, 2009 4:01 am
by tymanthius
Remember, SOUTH Africa moves well away from the equator. It's more akin to Central US than Southern.

Look at a globe & it makes sense. Or an Aussie map of the world (AU is center).

;)

Edit: I wasn't looking at a globe, so I guessed wrong. Sorry. That, and I'm bad at geography. :)

Posted: Fri Sep 25, 2009 5:04 am
by Gummiente
Thanks for the lesson, boys, but my remark was made tongue in cheek. Winter to a Canadian means lots of snow and cold, cold weather... winter in South Africa can't possibly mean skiiing and frost bite, yes?

Posted: Fri Sep 25, 2009 5:29 am
by king robb
being the same distance from the equator as south texas, I am thinking not.

Posted: Fri Sep 25, 2009 11:03 am
by RockBottom
Gummiente wrote:
CamSA wrote:I keep an old BMW 316 as my winter car
Pardon my ignorance of your country, but... winter?... in South Africa? :dunno:
One of the coldest nights I've spent in my life was in an unheated room at the military base at Saldhana, South Africa.

Posted: Fri Sep 25, 2009 11:06 am
by RockBottom
Gummiente wrote:Thanks for the lesson, boys, but my remark was made tongue in cheek. Winter to a Canadian means lots of snow and cold, cold weather... winter in South Africa can't possibly mean skiiing and frost bite, yes?
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/14154793/