5/10 because I can imagine foreign public transport is a lot nicer than public transport here in downtown Detroit. This is Danita, my 2000 Lexus ES300 which I bought from my grandfather to replace my 98 Regal that I wrecked. She had 147,236 miles when I got her, now she's at 148,098. The only rust is a couple dots of paint bubbling but they are smaller than a finger nail.
8/10, pretty car in white, looks pretty much good as new. The ES series was never vailable where I live. I've never seen one in the metal, so yours can also be considered a distinctive drive by me. And now... Revile me...
3/10 I doubt that's yours, but even so, I don't like the new Lambos. Now, everyone loves a Mini (this isn't mine, but mine looks pretty much the same but without the bars on the back.)
most cheapest fastest car i know of (170 km speed and reach of 500 km on 35 liters) the 2002 model can get 225 kmu
It's on a dyno...... Not on the road. The Twingo 1.2 16V (75 hp) reaches 168 km/h, and the 1.2 8V reaches 151 km/h (manufacturer's data) under ideal conditions. Not to mention that there is always a positive meter offset. A car wil -almost- always display the speed a bit higher than the actual speed. e.g. A friend of mine had a Twingo 1.2 8V and while driving to Luxembourg we reached 153 km/h on the GPS, downhill... The speedometer displayed something like 163 km/h or so. I was in Germany a week ago. The needle in my speedometer displayed -/+ 185 km/h while the actual speed on GPS was 178 km/h. TL,DR: try again and measure your speed with the GPS. ^This was on the German autobahn. Pictures not taken at the same moment