Some years ago I flew into Dulles late at night, went and picked up a rental car and drove on to the hotel where I parked in the lot. White Ford Taurus. Next morning I come out and there are like 30 white Tauri parked in the lot. I finally found it by looking at license plates, the key tag had the plate number on it. No telling how I would have determined which was mine if not for that, other than trying a key in each one which might or might not have found "my" car.

--R



On 4/3/15 7:48 AM, Tim Crone wrote:
Though I suppose it could apply to recent Mercedes.

I am within a few months of trading the van out for something - Accord or
Camry probably, by the numbers.  So I'm thinking about this, and I walk
into the parking lot at the Wal-Mart, and I realize I have no idea how to
find a particular generic car in a sea of generic cars.  I've always driven
old or odd vehicles so it has never come up before - I just park, do my
business, and can spot the car/van within a few moments of being outside.

So how does this work?  Do you get to where you can differentiate your
silver Camry from the thirty other silver Camrys?  Painting the roof orange
is probably not going to happen.

Thanks,
Tim
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