Not our property thankfully hahaI agree ! - The state of that fence and those brambles - shocking
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Not our property thankfully hahaI agree ! - The state of that fence and those brambles - shocking
The 2 million cyclists that think it's the Tour de France on the roads today....
If your not going to ride in a tandem like you should then yes YOU will get VERY close to me....but that's YOUR fault NOT mine.
You need a big magnet attached to the undertray - a tad cheaper than keeping Mr Michelin in croissants
I don't know how Mr Michelin man finds these screws? My Super Sports got littered with them as well. Mr Goodyear doesn't have as many issues. Wish people would not be so careless with screws in the beginning.Just bought my 6th Michelin Screwfinder 4S of the year... I'm averaging about 376 miles a tyre at the moment.
Just noticed the Michelin man waving goodbye to my tyre (or hello to another £160).
View attachment 17474
They employ a team of Ninja-like 'Monsieurs Michelin' who roam the land looking for cars wearing expensive Pneus so they can leave a light sprinkling of sharp fasteners nearby. They are experts in knowing exactly where to place that rusty old 4.0x20mm Pozi woodscrew so that it penetrates the tyre in the optimum place: just close enough to the sidewall so that their cohorts at the tyre fitters can use their well practiced sharp intake of breath and repeat that famous and unwelcome phrase: "can't repair that, mate..."I don't know how Mr Michelin man finds these screws? My Super Sports got littered with them as well. Mr Goodyear doesn't have as many issues. Wish people would not be so careless with screws in the beginning.
I don't know how Mr Michelin man finds these screws? My Super Sports got littered with them as well. Mr Goodyear doesn't have as many issues. Wish people would not be so careless with screws in the beginning.
They employ a team of Ninja-like 'Monsieurs Michelin' who roam the land looking for cars wearing expensive Pneus so they can leave a light sprinkling of sharp fasteners nearby. They are experts in knowing exactly where to place that rusty old 4.0x20mm Pozi woodscrew so that it penetrates the tyre in the optimum place: just close enough to the sidewall so that their cohorts at the tyre fitters can use their well practiced sharp intake of breath and repeat that famous and unwelcome phrase: "can't repair that, mate..."