2010 STERLING 8500 Recall
Diamler Trucks has announced that it is recalling certain models of the 2007 through 2010 Freightliner, Sterling, and Western Star vehicles equipped with Detroit Diesel DD15 EPA07 engines which were…
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oh its fine.. its fine for a chevy diesel atleast.. as long as it runs its fine? for a chevy.. ahahahah that things fucked get a navistar 7.3 otherwise known as a powerstroke diesel
RT @KrystleElaine Listen to 'Detroit Diesel Radio Mix 1' by RT
Alvin Lee
Filed under: Diesel, Audi, Europe/EU One of the star vehicles sold by the VW group in China is the Audi A6L, a longer wheelbase version of the popular A6 sedan. The hot seller moved 8,440 units last July. Now, the German company has decided to offer the A6L with one of the company’s famous TDI diesel engines: the 2.7-liter TDI that offers 189hp. In the A6L, the engine puts out a healthy 350 Nm (258 lb-ft) or torque and has an average fuel consumption of 6.8 l/100 km (34.6 mpg U.S.), with prices starting at 488,800 yuan ($71,500 U.S.). This isn’t VW’s first attempt to sell diesels in China. Since 2002, the marque has offered the Jetta SDI, the Bora SDI, the Caddy SDI and even the old 2.5-liter TDI engine on the A6, which resulted in lackluster sales. Perhaps the Audi A6L will turn the tide. [Source: Auto Sohu via Le Blog Auto] Audi tries again to convert Chinese to diesels with new A6L TDI originally appeared on Autoblog Green on Thu, 20 Aug 2009 09:58:00 EST. Please see our terms for…
Mr. Jones has every right to express his opinions in The Western Star. As he points out, “it's a free country.” It's such a disappointment that Mr. Jones doesn't understand that when he–and other public figures–share their opinions in the press, their words have consequences. For better or worse, Mr. Hardaway and Mr. Jones are seen as leaders in their communities. When they make declarations that demean people, their words give others permission to do the same. In spite of Mr. Jones' support of “free speech,” and his assertion that anti-gay bigotry is somehow less harmful than racist bigotry, I bet that he would take a different approach if Mr. Hardaway had said, “I hate Christians, so I let it be known. I don’t like Christians and they shouldn’t be in the world or in the United States.” Would Mr. Jones still feel it's harmless to say someone doesn't belong in the world because of a “choice” they've made? To set the record straight, hate and fear hurt people.
Irrelevant?! I think it was very creative. I don't know what other factors came into play in this case, but going by only what you've told us, it sounds like a high grade was deserved.