January 10, 201016 yr Some vehicles just have that urban feel. Slick and sophisticated, a person would be downright scared to drive them on a dirt road, much less buy one if you live beyond the suburbs. Other cars, meanwhile, just have that country air about them, they speak plainly to their prospective buyers that they can hold up when the blacktop ends. Post your city car/country car picks here, if you so desire. Here's two to get started: City car: Chevrolet Equinox Country car: Jeep Liberty
January 10, 201016 yr I actually see many more Liberty's in my city than I do Equinox's. City Car: Smart Country Car: Silverado 3500
January 10, 201016 yr City: Mini Cooper S Country: International Harvester Scout (I'm pretty sure these things are allergic to paved roads)
January 10, 201016 yr City car: Jeep Grand Cherokee Suburbia car: Jeep Grand Cherokee Country car: Jeep Grand Cherokee In my experience, they work well in any of these environs. It's been my ideal daily driver in any environment this past decade. My M3 worked great in all 3 also, esp. rural winding, twisty roads. I wouldn't necessarily take in on dirt roads, though. I did drive my Mustang to the top of Pike's Peak, though. Edited January 10, 201016 yr by Cubical-aka-Moltar
January 10, 201016 yr City car: Fusion Hybrid (no sense buying a hybrid if you do a lot of highway driving) Country car: Any Big Three 1/2 ton truck Out in the wild: Ford Raptor
January 11, 201016 yr City car... Smart with Hayabusa drivetrain. Country car... LS7 '90s Caprice two door wagon phantom. Off road... International CXT monsterized.
January 11, 201016 yr Maybe I'm taking this too literally... VW Golf Country 4x4: VW Jetta City Stromer Electric:
January 11, 201016 yr Depends where you are... I'm talking in broad strokes here, but here goes: US/Canada city: Cadillac CTS country: Ford F-150 Western Europe city: Fiat 500 country: Range Rover Hong Kong (where I'm now) city: BMW 5-series country: Volvo XC60 city: Toyota Estima country: Toyota Hiace Japan city: Subaru R2 country: Land Cruiser Australia city: Ford Falcon country: Holden Ute Edited January 11, 201016 yr by pow
January 11, 201016 yr Author Maybe I'm taking this too literally... VW Golf Country 4x4: VW Jetta City Stromer Electric: Haha, that Golf, whoa. You know I think of VW's as country cars because of the hippie/earth person connection.
January 11, 201016 yr Maybe I'm taking this too literally... VW Golf Country 4x4: VW Jetta City Stromer Electric:
January 11, 201016 yr All of the little penalty boxes currently on the road are Urban. They'd be scary on an interstate, and all but useless on a gravel road. Any fullsize pickup would be the opposite side of the coin - though it has its uses in an urban environment. Edited January 11, 201016 yr by Camino LS6
January 11, 201016 yr All of the little penalty boxes currntly on the road are Urban. They'd be scary on an interstate, and all but useless on a gravel road. Any fullsize pickup would be the opposite side of the coin - though it has its uses in an urban environment. Oh please, our penalty box spent every day of its life until 4 years ago on gravel roads,and spends lots of time on the highway. And that's an early 90's small car, new one today are much more solid on the highway. The Cobalt I had cruised at 100 effortlessly. Of course for real dirt trail/off roading yeah small cars, and most cars are useless.
January 11, 201016 yr Another car choice I like as a city car is a Crown Vic PI, in dark brown, gray or black, w/ a few scratches and dents. Tinted windows, black steel wheels, push bars on the front bumper. Perfect for driving around a city, wouldn't worry about door dings. Edited January 11, 201016 yr by Cubical-aka-Moltar
January 12, 201016 yr City car: AMC Concord & Sprit Country car: AMC Eagle City: Citroën DS Country: Citroën 2CV (interchangable) City: Oldsmobile Bravada Country: Chevy Blazer
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