Hello all, we have a 2008 Challenger, the Silver Bullet. Bought it new in July 2008. And now, here we are on another set of forums.
Welcome aboard crazy... nice Ram as well Love those trucks and challengers.. my kinda guy... Enjoy your time and feel free to look around and jump in anytime !
Nice chally, but can you guys explain me what is the point with these trucks ? Seems to be every american loves those trucks.. It's not even handy when you need carry furnitures or something when it's raining or so. I like big trucks with V8 but I dont know what's the point americans like em so much
dc... not sure I can.. but it's kind of .. in a very different way mind you... like having a muscle car can be. In a truck.. you're 'above the crowd'... riding high in the saddle, with a piece of country stuck in ya... just enough to enjoy the world around ya, not making a 'status' statement, just feeling good... probably doesn't translate well, but that's what it does... sorta I grew up in Texas.. (fortunately) and (most) everybody had a truck.. when you grow up with one, you can't imagine yourself without. Try it.. you'll like it. They can be (and frequently are among car guys) as 'individual' as any ride.. vette, challenger, stang, whatever... And occasionally they come in handy for something or other too! Or so we tend to tell the ladies so we can get one... and then there's that bench seat.. so the wife can sit right up next to you sometimes, and cuddle a bit, like the old days... cruising... just three feet higher up... it's all the same really. To each his own.. definitions of 'cool' change ... ebb and flow..
I don't know about the bench seat genotex, mine is a supercharged 5speed, bucket seated mid size. For me, I grew up never wanting a truck. In the summer I had a musclecar, in the winter a beater, usually a 4 door. But in the early 90's I bought my first truck for one reason, insurance. It was cheaper for a truck. But now, I can't imagine not having a truck. I guess it is kind of like our Texas attitude for guns....It is better to have one and not need it, than to need one and not have it