Ah yes, French cars...
Ah yes, French cars
Other urls found in this thread:
More sensible than Reliant Robin. At least that one can turn without flipping over.
That's a myth. Reliants don't actually flip that easy. I know because I drove one.
Post teef
You still drive ladas, don't start.
saw a few irl
never seen one irl
Don't lie, it still starts and works for some reason.
there is a boomer with an old lada niva in my town
Does he have a crooked posture?
Qute. Looks like a frog
no, he is not russian
Ngl my mind draws a complete blank if I try to think of any french car companies that exist beyond Renault and the one with the lion logo
>The one with the lion logo
Don't worry they own all the others anyway.
VGH the most perfect car ever created
>In 1977 you couldn't drink the water in france and they hadn't heard of an ignition key
youtube.com
Fake then, any driver gets scoliosis after prolonged exposure to Niva.
Top Gear caused me to learn about the Dacia Sandero (which coincidentally Dacia is owned by the French company Renault), then I found out you can't get them in the US because they don't pass safety regulations.
Dacia Duster is unironically the best quality-price car existing atm on the market. Change my mind
is niva really that bad? I was thinking of buy one with LPG tank
ladas are good but only if you buy them in Russia. Otherwise import taxes make them cost the double and you can find much better options at that price
>then I found out you can't get them in the US because they don't pass safety regulations.
More like you can't get them in the US because the parent company Renault or it's romanian subsidiary knows that americans will not be interested in a cheap B-segment hatchback that would be impossible to service without a US-wide renault/dacia dealership network so the idea of sending multiple cars to be crash-tested according to DOT standards makes no sense financially.
Sandero shares a platform with nissan juke, a model which was on sale in the US.
These seem to be selling quite well here