@Retro Car Reviews @0:13 seeing a Hyundai Pony driving around 32 years ago on video especially in BC is just the coolest time capsule footage ever! Imagine how rare it is to find one of those cars TODAY. My mom’s friend used to drive one way back in the day, it was a 1987 and it had grounding problems and the horn would honk at random times by itself😂. She would drive it in Victoria BC. I have a 1986 Toyota Camry Liftback 2 tone blue 5 speed, and it was a Burnaby Vancouver car since new for 36 years until I picked it up this January. Owned by an elderly gentleman all those years, he was well known in the car community there. Imagine seeing it in one of these classic footage videos, that would be dope! Thank you guys for making me reminisce about nostalgia😎
As of 2023, this still hasn't been implemented Canada-wide - vent stacks at fueling stations vent straight to atmosphere every time a truck refuels tanks - good job regulators 👍 - Kudos to Shell for piloting this though - it mustn't have been economically feasible otherwise the industry would have adopted
@Retro Car Reviews @0:13 seeing a Hyundai Pony driving around 32 years ago on video especially in BC is just the coolest time capsule footage ever! Imagine how rare it is to find one of those cars TODAY. My mom’s friend used to drive one way back in the day, it was a 1987 and it had grounding problems and the horn would honk at random times by itself😂. She would drive it in Victoria BC. I have a 1986 Toyota Camry Liftback 2 tone blue 5 speed, and it was a Burnaby Vancouver car since new for 36 years until I picked it up this January. Owned by an elderly gentleman all those years, he was well known in the car community there. Imagine seeing it in one of these classic footage videos, that would be dope! Thank you guys for making me reminisce about nostalgia😎
As of 2023, this still hasn't been implemented Canada-wide - vent stacks at fueling stations vent straight to atmosphere every time a truck refuels tanks - good job regulators 👍 - Kudos to Shell for piloting this though - it mustn't have been economically feasible otherwise the industry would have adopted