Brockles
Brockles
Brockles

grammar

If you honestly can’t tell the difference between some kidding around about a driver’s hair that defies physics in a way that is nothing short of amazing and the kinds of disgusting, insulting, and dehumanizing comments other people have to put up with about their looks, you might be making a garbage comment!

Damn.

I’m not a pilot either. However, it appears as if the real culprit of the hard impact is gravity. If the earth had less mass the impact wouldn’t have been as severe.

Cayman my ass.

I’m not easily impressed. I’m impressed.

Q: Which car built for gravel is the best?
A: A rental car.

Sorry I didn’t hear you, your mom’s thighs are clamped over my ears

Until someone comes along to tell you it's a wing

Just took an Uber around the block for no reason other than this comment.

Can you come by and push my clutch in every morning? It’ll just take a second.

A supercharger (assuming we’re talking a positive displacement roots- type blower, here) moves a fixed volume of air per rotation, and since its RPM is dictated by engine RPM, the boost it produces is only on top of ambient conditions. Go up in elevation to a higher density altitude, and your boost pressure will drop

Well, I did pick up your mom last night, so you got me there.

Coach must have a bad temper if it takes only one Kelvin to make him reach the boiling point.

She’s a good driver.

Giggity?

It’s stated because it’s true. It was his truck in the way, so one would assume he knew it was there. However, you’re going too fast for the environment if you can’t correct for things that occur. If lifting causes oversteer, then it was too fast for the environment. Lifting mid corner means too much speed.

What does Senna have to do with this? A steering column doesn’t not move because you have a dome around your head. His accident has nothing to do with debris. As for Bianchi, he would have come out the same way. A tractor’s frame is still going to slam through whatever low weight, high speed object.

What’s the last car you were around? I ask because I don’t think you know how modern cars (pretty much everything built after 1945) work. Cars have these devices called “fans” that move air across heat exchangers. These “fans” can be driven by rotational force supplied by electricity or directly from the engine. By