sauscary wrote:
I've seen them often, generally near military facilities. Think about how Japanese cars get to America after being built.
Hawaii is an island. Japanese cars are build in Ohio, Ky, Indiana, and NC. Those are mainland states.
sauscary wrote:
I've seen them often, generally near military facilities. Think about how Japanese cars get to America after being built.
Hawaii is an island. Japanese cars are build in Ohio, Ky, Indiana, and NC. Those are mainland states.
the430miler wrote:
Just been busy getting my team ready for conference and regionals and nats.
I dont think it is scientifically possible for a car with a Hawaiian license plate to actually exist in the mainland United states.
1. How would the car get here from Hawaii?
2. There is no road connecting Hawaii to the United states.
3. The owner of the car would have to put his car on a plane and fly it over the Pacific Ocean
-the430miler
Mentality > physicality
San Antonio university coach
Lord, I hope you coach better than you think about stuff like this...
One of my neighbors was an airline pilot with Guam plates on his vehicles. So yes, it is scientifically possible, but only actually happens if a tax evasion scheme is being perpetrated.
notrump wrote:
One of my neighbors was an airline pilot with Guam plates on his vehicles. So yes, it is scientifically possible, but only actually happens if a tax evasion scheme is being perpetrated.
Thanks for sharing.
So what about the other way around?
Is it mentally or physically possible to see an Oklahoma liscense plate on a car while in Hawaii?
Since this thread is oriented towards reducing ignorance, the rules about having an updated drivers license and insurance vary from state to state with whether they allow exemptions for active duty military.
76 and still doing distance wrote:
Hardloper wrote:
Why would anyone ship a car from Hawaii to the contiguous United States? Is there a shortage of cars here or something?
Uh, typically it goes like this:
-- you own a car in Hawai'i
-- the car suits your purposes
-- you're moving to the mainland
-- you don't want or need to buy a new car at your new place
-- you ship the damn thing.
Not real hard, this one.
Hardloper is not very bright...
Gawd, this thread has legs!
Wife and i saw and elderly woman driving around New Zealand (South island) with New Guinea plates, turns out it was Amelia Earhart.
Emphatically yes, if the liscence plate was solar powered or some sh!t.
the430miler wrote:
Thanks for sharing.
So what about the other way around?
Is it mentally or physically possible to see an Oklahoma liscense plate on a car while in Hawaii?
Sheesh. Of course it is. I can't at the moment think of an OK plate I've seen lately, but I've seen east coast plates, midwestern plates, and so on. I've seen TX plates.
I don't get what's so hard for you to understand. You do know that cargo ships go both ways, don't you? I mean when they carry cargo from Hawai'i to the west coast, they load up again and return to Hawai'i.
Think of it as out-and-back, if that makes it easier for you.
the430miler wrote:
Just been busy getting my team ready for conference and regionals and nats.
I dont think it is scientifically possible for a car with a Hawaiian license plate to actually exist in the mainland United states.
1. How would the car get here from Hawaii?
2. There is no road connecting Hawaii to the United states.
3. The owner of the car would have to put his car on a plane and fly it over the Pacific Ocean
-the430miler
Mentality > physicality
San Antonio university coach
Join the military. Happens all the time.
Alan
Very easy. My parents did it when i was twelve, we were moving from Hawaii back to east coast. Pontiac statoon wagon poaded onto the cruise ship we sailed on, and 5 days later we landed in San Francisco. Drove across the country for weeka, stopping at tourist sites and family and friends along the way. Got stares in more than a few places for the aloha plates.
greenfuture wrote:
Very easy. My parents did it when i was twelve, we were moving from Hawaii back to east coast. Pontiac statoon wagon poaded onto the cruise ship we sailed on, and 5 days later we landed in San Francisco. Drove across the country for weeka, stopping at tourist sites and family and friends along the way. Got stares in more than a few places for the aloha plates.
Awesome!
What year?
the430miler wrote:
Just been busy getting my team ready for conference and regionals and nats.
I dont think it is scientifically possible for a car with a Hawaiian license plate to actually exist in the mainland United states.
1. How would the car get here from Hawaii?
2. There is no road connecting Hawaii to the United states.
3. The owner of the car would have to put his car on a plane and fly it over the Pacific Ocean
-the430miler
Mentality > physicality
San Antonio university coach
There is a sandabar that is navigatable from the Baja Sur Penisula to Honolulu every December 24 .
But you must own a Honda CRV or better .
76 and still doing distance wrote:
Bodies of water do not curve.
Nonsense. Are you a flat-earther?
You cannot prove a ball. Bodies of water do not curve. We never landed on the Moon.
Liquids naturally form into a sphere due to surface tension. It’s easy to see this with mercury.
Any of container ships can bring the car from hawaii to the continent. The important thing if there is such a ship which constantly circulates there, because many cars from germany and japan come very often through the pacific ocean and they carry a lot of cars. The distance is also much longer. I also know this comapny https://www.crosscountrycarshipping.com/ they shipped me car from Germany, may be they ship cars from Hawai too.
I think it is quite feasible but for a fee :)
Runningart2004 wrote:
Join the military. Happens all the time.
when I was a kid we'd always play the license plate game when we went on long family road trips in the midwest, the game where you keep track of what state license plates you've seen. Got Hawaii way more often than North Dakota or Maine. Always figured it was military people moving around.
tysonssock wrote:
I think it is quite feasible but for a fee :)
It's impossible!
They must be aliens.
RIP: D3 All-American Frank Csorba - who ran 13:56 in March - dead
RENATO can you talk about the preparation of Emile Cairess 2:06
Running for Bowerman Track Club used to be cool now its embarrassing
Hats off to my dad. He just ran a 1:42 Half Marathon and turns 75 in 2 months!
Great interview with Steve Cram - says Jakob has no chance of WRs this year
Rest in Peace Adrian Lehmann - 2:11 Swiss marathoner. Dies of heart attack.