Вот, одинакового года выпуска. Разный пробег, разная цена....
Куда смотреть? На что обращать внимание, а?
А Митсубиси? Ниссан? Может быть они то же неплохие?
Сможете подсказать, плиз?
А что означает SUV и что в машине другое с разными буквами после SSR? Вот....
_________________ Во-первых мы ваше ведро вообще не брали.
Во-вторых вернули его целым.
В-третьих дырка в нём уже была!
Вот, одинакового года выпуска. Разный пробег, разная цена....
Куда смотреть? На что обращать внимание, а?
А Митсубиси? Ниссан? Может быть они то же неплохие?
Сможете подсказать, плиз?
А что означает SUV и что в машине другое с разными буквами после SSR? Вот....
Из вышеперечисленных лично я бы выбрал первую тойоту.
155 тыс - не пробег для нее. Отъездит еще несколько раз по столько же.
Новые батареи, неуезженные колеса, комплектация SSR-G (которая побогаче), регулярное обслуживание, один владелец плюс новые WOF и registration.
SUV - sport utilite vehicle
а SSR X и SSR G - разные комплектации
поподробней можно почитать в ссылке:
Вот, одинакового года выпуска. Разный пробег, разная цена....
Куда смотреть? На что обращать внимание, а?
А Митсубиси? Ниссан? Может быть они то же неплохие?
Сможете подсказать, плиз?
А что означает SUV и что в машине другое с разными буквами после SSR? Вот....
_________________ Во-первых мы ваше ведро вообще не брали.
Во-вторых вернули его целым.
В-третьих дырка в нём уже была!
Jagr is at home in Omsk, a city the size of Dallas but with all the luster of Albany. The team has found him an apartment (which he shares with his 22-year-old Czech girlfriend) and he loves it more than the rental he had in Trump Tower. Not that he had a problem in New York, he says. He never suffered the pressure, nor the press. “For hockey players, New York’s not that bad,” he says as we cruise past Lenin Square, where a statue of Lenin still stands. “Because you’ve got the Yankees, you got baseball and American football. Hockey? Maybe it’s No. 5 in popularity. After fishing.”
“Here, it’s not like in the U.S.,” Jagr says at a different point. “You got such freedom, it’s hard to believe. In the U.S. you have so many rules, everything’s regulated and structured. When you make a mistake you pay for it — a lot.” It is a theme that Jagr returns to often, the freedom of this strange place. It is not so much that his departure from New York has left a disquieting wake, but that he has discovered the unlikely and unexpected promise of Siberia. “Look at A-Rod,” he says. “No matter how well you do — they always want more. Expectations only climb higher. In Russia you don’t have to worry if you make a mistake. And that’s what I love about living here. There’s always another way to make up for it. Nothing’s too serious. Nothing is a problem, and at the same time, everything’s a problem. But somehow no matter how bad things are, you can always work it out.”
How, I ask, can he untangle the contradiction?
“I can’t. I don’t understand it myself,” Jagr says. “It’s not something you explain. You have to live it.”
Thanks in large part to wealthy Russians, Montenegro has received more foreign investment per capita than any other country on the Continent. In recent years, Russian investors have gobbled up land on the Montenegrin coast, a fashionable alternative to the South of France and coastal Turkey. Russians, including the heavily leveraged Russian billionaire Oleg Deripaska, have also made huge investments in the country’s industrial sector.
Цитата:
But the Russianization here is unmistakable. Russians can be seen and heard everywhere: on the beaches, in clubs, in upscale restaurants and in a recently opened Russian-language elementary school.
Цитата:
Lazar Radenovic, Budva’s young deputy mayor, said Russians started to invest here eight years ago, after the Balkan wars of the 1990s, when real estate prices were severely depressed. Russian investment has since grown to more than $13 billion, he said. In Budva, he noted, the influx had created a new class of millionaires — 500 at last count — who had improved the town’s tax base and development.
Вот, одинакового года выпуска. Разный пробег, разная цена....
Куда смотреть? На что обращать внимание, а?
А Митсубиси? Ниссан? Может быть они то же неплохие?
Сможете подсказать, плиз?
А что означает SUV и что в машине другое с разными буквами после SSR? Вот....
_________________ Во-первых мы ваше ведро вообще не брали.
Во-вторых вернули его целым.
В-третьих дырка в нём уже была!
Вот, одинакового года выпуска. Разный пробег, разная цена....
Куда смотреть? На что обращать внимание, а?
А Митсубиси? Ниссан? Может быть они то же неплохие?
Сможете подсказать, плиз?
А что означает SUV и что в машине другое с разными буквами после SSR? Вот....
Из вышеперечисленных лично я бы выбрал первую тойоту.
155 тыс - не пробег для нее. Отъездит еще несколько раз по столько же.
Новые батареи, неуезженные колеса, комплектация SSR-G (которая побогаче), регулярное обслуживание, один владелец плюс новые WOF и registration.
SUV - sport utilite vehicle
а SSR X и SSR G - разные комплектации
поподробней можно почитать в ссылке:
Вот, одинакового года выпуска. Разный пробег, разная цена....
Куда смотреть? На что обращать внимание, а?
А Митсубиси? Ниссан? Может быть они то же неплохие?
Сможете подсказать, плиз?
А что означает SUV и что в машине другое с разными буквами после SSR? Вот....
_________________ Во-первых мы ваше ведро вообще не брали.
Во-вторых вернули его целым.
В-третьих дырка в нём уже была!
Jagr is at home in Omsk, a city the size of Dallas but with all the luster of Albany. The team has found him an apartment (which he shares with his 22-year-old Czech girlfriend) and he loves it more than the rental he had in Trump Tower. Not that he had a problem in New York, he says. He never suffered the pressure, nor the press. “For hockey players, New York’s not that bad,” he says as we cruise past Lenin Square, where a statue of Lenin still stands. “Because you’ve got the Yankees, you got baseball and American football. Hockey? Maybe it’s No. 5 in popularity. After fishing.”
“Here, it’s not like in the U.S.,” Jagr says at a different point. “You got such freedom, it’s hard to believe. In the U.S. you have so many rules, everything’s regulated and structured. When you make a mistake you pay for it — a lot.” It is a theme that Jagr returns to often, the freedom of this strange place. It is not so much that his departure from New York has left a disquieting wake, but that he has discovered the unlikely and unexpected promise of Siberia. “Look at A-Rod,” he says. “No matter how well you do — they always want more. Expectations only climb higher. In Russia you don’t have to worry if you make a mistake. And that’s what I love about living here. There’s always another way to make up for it. Nothing’s too serious. Nothing is a problem, and at the same time, everything’s a problem. But somehow no matter how bad things are, you can always work it out.”
How, I ask, can he untangle the contradiction?
“I can’t. I don’t understand it myself,” Jagr says. “It’s not something you explain. You have to live it.”
Thanks in large part to wealthy Russians, Montenegro has received more foreign investment per capita than any other country on the Continent. In recent years, Russian investors have gobbled up land on the Montenegrin coast, a fashionable alternative to the South of France and coastal Turkey. Russians, including the heavily leveraged Russian billionaire Oleg Deripaska, have also made huge investments in the country’s industrial sector.
Цитата:
But the Russianization here is unmistakable. Russians can be seen and heard everywhere: on the beaches, in clubs, in upscale restaurants and in a recently opened Russian-language elementary school.
Цитата:
Lazar Radenovic, Budva’s young deputy mayor, said Russians started to invest here eight years ago, after the Balkan wars of the 1990s, when real estate prices were severely depressed. Russian investment has since grown to more than $13 billion, he said. In Budva, he noted, the influx had created a new class of millionaires — 500 at last count — who had improved the town’s tax base and development.