So, I was curious and did some digging on the old LLV. Apparently it has a 13.5 gallon tank, and the vehicle is rated at 17mpg, but in actual use it gets more like 8-10mpg. So taking the worst case of 8, that’s about 100 mile range, so the NGDV isn’t really all that much worse. I’m guessing that’s going to cover the majority of routes, with the few outliers being covered by the gas powered versions.
I also regret your decision.
Ooooh, red snapper! Very nice!
Badgers? Badgers?! We don’t need no stinkin’ BADGERS!
Glad to be a member!
I hope you do too! Best of luck,
I knooooow! I’ve wanted one for years now, but I wanted it to be my best guitar, so I’ve been patient and put in my dues on a Squier strat and a Sheraton and have just been window shopping for the longest. Very happy to have it!
Dang, I didn’t know that was a thing! It’s the American Ultra. The gen5 noiseless pickups are amazing, and I’m liking the compound radius a lot.
Make sure to movie your teenage kid into that new room!
Well I don’t know about an acronym but it looks like “occasionally rains” but there are three Ns.
So hot right now!
Atomicrops. It’s a solid rogue-lite farming game that is a lot of fun to just pop into and make a run.
That’s a trailer connection, but close enough.
It’s the very last one on the list.
Brave Little Toaster was a staple. Wonder if it has anything to do with my constant desire to repair anything I can instead of throwing it away…
The way I understand it, pagers are a one way device. When a message is sent to a pager it is broadcasted by the network for the pager to recieve, but there isn’t any sort of confirmation sent back to the tower, so they can’t really be tracked. That’s why they were in use prior to cellphones. These pagers ran on a AAA battery from what I understand, which wouldn’t last very long if it was having to constantly broadcast like a cellphone.