Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:3 men I know have traded in there minivans or suvs for big pickup trucks. They live in the suburbs and not rural or farming areas and don`t haul lots of stuff around on the weekends. So what is the appeal of a pickup truck? And (a bit unrelated) how many people can fit in the front seat? My son rode in one (a teachers) and he did not have a seat belt. He was in the middle front position. I was shocked and will be complaining to the school.
They have teeny little appendage and those pickups compensate for what nature cheated them.
Women with teeny little brains always think insulting penis size is really clever and original.
Anonymous wrote:I don't care what you do at home, but please don't bring your pickup truck to my huge government parking lot, where the spots are tiny. Trying to park my car between two pickup trucks in the morning and then squeezing my way out of my car is not fun.
Also, you don't need to drive your pickup truck to your office job, so it can sit there all day and then be driven back to your house.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My HOA bans commercial vehicles and trucks.
It’s in the registered documents with the county depository.
If it’s tagged as a truck (registerqtion) it’s banned.
Same for cargo vans. Any name on it or ladder rack it’s banned.
This keeps the community values up.
There is plenty of county streets for overnight parking.
Low class is low class. No thanks. I like the UMC rules.
I use my pickup truck to haul my horse to dressage shows. Sorry to be so low class!
Real class would use a Range Rover or Bentayga. Sorry pleb.![]()
Says the babbling idiot, who clearly knows less than nothing about towing anything besides her own fat ass.
RR's don't have the capability, torque, wheelbase, rear receiver, rear axle ratio, suspension, transmission, brakes and trailer brake-controller to tow a two-stall single or dual axle horse trailer. You NEED a pick-up, or at the very least, a full-size SUV with a live axle like a Tahoe or Sequoia. A horse trailer weighs about 1,500-2,000 lbs. Another 1,500-1,800 for two horses, and you're way past the 50% tow rating for a RR. A F150 would LAUGH at a load like that. A Superduty wouldn't even know it was back there. But a RR would be struggling mightily, and God help you if you try and make a panic stop.
You really oughta keep your mouth shut when it comes to things you know nothing about.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My HOA bans commercial vehicles and trucks.
It’s in the registered documents with the county depository.
If it’s tagged as a truck (registerqtion) it’s banned.
Same for cargo vans. Any name on it or ladder rack it’s banned.
This keeps the community values up.
There is plenty of county streets for overnight parking.
Low class is low class. No thanks. I like the UMC rules.
I use my pickup truck to haul my horse to dressage shows. Sorry to be so low class!
Real class would use a Range Rover or Bentayga. Sorry pleb.![]()
Says the babbling idiot, who clearly knows less than nothing about towing anything besides her own fat ass.
RR's don't have the capability, torque, wheelbase, rear receiver, rear axle ratio, suspension, transmission, brakes and trailer brake-controller to tow a two-stall single or dual axle horse trailer. You NEED a pick-up, or at the very least, a full-size SUV with a live axle like a Tahoe or Sequoia. A horse trailer weighs about 1,500-2,000 lbs. Another 1,500-1,800 for two horses, and you're way past the 50% tow rating for a RR. A F150 would LAUGH at a load like that. A Superduty wouldn't even know it was back there. But a RR would be struggling mightily, and God help you if you try and make a panic stop.
You really oughta keep your mouth shut when it comes to things you know nothing about.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My HOA bans commercial vehicles and trucks.
It’s in the registered documents with the county depository.
If it’s tagged as a truck (registerqtion) it’s banned.
Same for cargo vans. Any name on it or ladder rack it’s banned.
This keeps the community values up.
There is plenty of county streets for overnight parking.
Low class is low class. No thanks. I like the UMC rules.
I use my pickup truck to haul my horse to dressage shows. Sorry to be so low class!
Real class would use a Range Rover or Bentayga. Sorry pleb.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My HOA bans commercial vehicles and trucks.
It’s in the registered documents with the county depository.
If it’s tagged as a truck (registerqtion) it’s banned.
Same for cargo vans. Any name on it or ladder rack it’s banned.
This keeps the community values up.
There is plenty of county streets for overnight parking.
Low class is low class. No thanks. I like the UMC rules.
I use my pickup truck to haul my horse to dressage shows. Sorry to be so low class!
Anonymous wrote:3 men I know have traded in there minivans or suvs for big pickup trucks. They live in the suburbs and not rural or farming areas and don`t haul lots of stuff around on the weekends. So what is the appeal of a pickup truck? And (a bit unrelated) how many people can fit in the front seat? My son rode in one (a teachers) and he did not have a seat belt. He was in the middle front position. I was shocked and will be complaining to the school.
Anonymous wrote:My HOA bans commercial vehicles and trucks.
It’s in the registered documents with the county depository.
If it’s tagged as a truck (registerqtion) it’s banned.
Same for cargo vans. Any name on it or ladder rack it’s banned.
This keeps the community values up.
There is plenty of county streets for overnight parking.
Low class is low class. No thanks. I like the UMC rules.
Anonymous wrote:3 men I know have traded in there minivans or suvs for big pickup trucks. They live in the suburbs and not rural or farming areas and don`t haul lots of stuff around on the weekends. So what is the appeal of a pickup truck? And (a bit unrelated) how many people can fit in the front seat? My son rode in one (a teachers) and he did not have a seat belt. He was in the middle front position. I was shocked and will be complaining to the school.