Shoppinit wrote:
You'll very quickly see that if you use the search facility to look up posts where 535dboy cites bam_bam and vice versa (asI did) then you'll see that I'm right. It's not rocket surgery, even a B7 owner should be able to manage it (that was tongue-in-cheek humour, by the way, for the sense-of-humour-challanged. I've got nothing against B7s; I regularly eat them in my M3.)
Daytona RS6 C5 Avant. Viper'd, Billies, Waggers, MTM box brain, C6 stoppers, xcarlink, R8 coolant cap (woohoo) ///M3E46 | XC90 (V8, natch) | Passat GTE | RR Classic V8 flapper "The major difference between a thing that might go wrong and a thing that cannot possibly go wrong is that when a thing that cannot possibly go wrong goes wrong it usually turns out to be impossible to get at and repair."
Shoppinit wrote:
You'll very quickly see that if you use the search facility to look up posts where 535dboy cites bam_bam and vice versa (asI did) then you'll see that I'm right. It's not rocket surgery, even a B7 owner should be able to manage it (that was tongue-in-cheek humour, by the way, for the sense-of-humour-challanged. I've got nothing against B7s; I regularly eat them in my M3.)
scaghead wrote:Chunk, can you elaborate a tad on a typical b7 owner fella?
Twas a joke mate to see how many would bite. Cmon, you should have just said fcuk off
Sad to say the nicest b7 owner I have met has moved to New Zealand
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Gone but NEVER forgotten - C5 RS6 Misano red avant.
Now - Empty garage
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Instructions
1. Stay calm when your feelings are hurt and allow time for yourself to completely cool off.
2. Think before you speak, or you may lash out with words that you can't retract and regret the consequences.
3. Prevent misjudging by not presuming the other person's intention. You may pass judgment incorrectly and make the situation worse. Ask yourself if the person's intent was deliberate or if it's unintentional.
4. Walk away from situations that may cause you to retaliate or seek revenge.
5. Try to put yourself in the other person's shoes and understand why he acted the way he did. It's a lot easier to forgive when you can understand the reason for someone's behavior.
6. Approach the person that offended you and express to her that she hurt your feelings by her behavior, actions or words. It's healthier to resolve the concern than to let it sit and debilitate you. However, be careful how you phrase what you say so that you do not appear to be antagonistic.
7. Choose to be not offended and avoid self-pity; you are only hurting yourself.
8. Forgive, overcome oversensitivity and seek to be at peace with yourself.
9. Pray for the ability to let go of hurt feelings.
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mavada wrote:Instructions
1. Stay calm when your feelings are hurt and allow time for yourself to completely cool off.
2. Think before you speak, or you may lash out with words that you can't retract and regret the consequences.
3. Prevent misjudging by not presuming the other person's intention. You may pass judgment incorrectly and make the situation worse. Ask yourself if the person's intent was deliberate or if it's unintentional.
4. Walk away from situations that may cause you to retaliate or seek revenge.
5. Try to put yourself in the other person's shoes and understand why he acted the way he did. It's a lot easier to forgive when you can understand the reason for someone's behavior.
6. Approach the person that offended you and express to her that she hurt your feelings by her behavior, actions or words. It's healthier to resolve the concern than to let it sit and debilitate you. However, be careful how you phrase what you say so that you do not appear to be antagonistic.
7. Choose to be not offended and avoid self-pity; you are only hurting yourself.
8. Forgive, overcome oversensitivity and seek to be at peace with yourself.
9. Pray for the ability to let go of hurt feelings.
Shoppinit wrote:
You'll very quickly see that if you use the search facility to look up posts where 535dboy cites bam_bam and vice versa (asI did) then you'll see that I'm right. It's not rocket surgery, even a B7 owner should be able to manage it (that was tongue-in-cheek humour, by the way, for the sense-of-humour-challanged. I've got nothing against B7s; I regularly eat them in my M3.)
Not in the wet
Not in the dry either, in my experience. M3 owners just can't put the power down, so it's a bit of a walk in the park as long as you make them start from a dig or if from a roll, in 1st gear.
Remap + crank pulley + decat M3 vs. RS4 with just piggies (no remap)
M3 best of the day 12.87 @ 114 MPH
RS4 with piggies best of the day 12.47 @ 113.7
RS4 bone stock (me) best of the day 12.83 @ 109.9 (below, vs a B8 S4 with remap and exhaust)
Last edited by sakimano on Mon Sep 09, 2013 6:45 pm, edited 2 times in total.