It almost makes you wonder who is this working on and why the scammers are even bothering.
It almost makes you wonder who is this working on and why the scammers are even bothering.
Agreed. It would be useful to see how many people are killed in such trainyards when there are operators in the train. If you walk in front a train at any speed, with any method of operation, it is not going to stop in time to avoid hitting you. The only advantage an operator in the train may have is hitting a horn if…
I’ll wear my New Balances on the street and my Pilotis on the track, as a real Corvette Man would.
The article said details were scarce but man, there isn’t anything there except for a guy using a restroom before a girl.
Ever seen a beach ball in a light breeze? This dude had no prayer. Coast Guard almost certainly saved his life.
That thing has a MASSIVE sail area, no keel, and his running is going to have zero to do with where it ends up.
If I had to guess, there aren’t that many pictures of coal rolling that are copyright free. We put stuff in the comments all the time that we get from Google Image search, but do that for a company and you end up being fired quicker than if you made a coal rolling pickup.
Should be higher in fines. Hopefully the list of their customers was turned over fully and that authorities are going to start working their way down that list. Get your brodozer to the shop and get those coal rolling mods yanked out before they come a’knocking.
ONLY a 1 million dollar fine? I’m guessing these diesel shops made 100X that selling shit that enabled diesel owners to break emissions laws.
You don’t have to drive. Driving is expensive and Americans are learning that they increasingly can’t afford it.
People who are the victims of those without insurance will also be quickly bankrupt.
Well, I’m not so sure about that. Do you have any idea how easy it is to get your hands on a loaded gun in the US? Toddlers do it all the time, and they ain’t exactly criminal masterminds. Likewise, getting oneself to a major airport certainly does not require any great intellect or planning.
The chassis ID of that Ferrari sold for $1.9M. The scrap metal they tossed in for free. It has LONG passed the point where you can make a brand new one of these from scratch for less than it costs to buy one in good condition, but without that all-important chassis ID, it’s not a Ferrari (and Ferrari will sue your ass…
Given the price tag and the limited production run, I’m guessing this is targeted towards the MECUM/Barret Jackson crowd. Most of these will probably just sit in a collection somewhere and never get driven. Most track enthusiasts with the means to buy this thing will probably opt for a GT3 or GT2 RS instead.
It’s very likely that this has an almost identical chassis to the GT3 car. Why would it not? And the cars that race in GT3 weigh between 2600 and 2800 lbs. There’s no way this thing is carrying another 1000 lbs.
I certainly know....just know...that the first person who leaves the road and strikes this barrier is going to sue. 100% certainty about this. They shouldn’t be able to, and should have no real case, as they were breaking the law to leave the road, but they will nonetheless sue just because reasons. “Reckless…
“But they constantly denied him over liability worries.”
ANOTHER Frank, Dodd housing crisis? shit.
Sheet metal looks crimped. It’ll be expensive.
The big difference is that theoretically select public servants having access to certain portions of that data (cars being tracked), versus in an airplane’s case, literally anyone from a stalker to a 5 year old messing around on their parent’s iPad has access to its current location.