Thats a very nice automobile...
Thats a very nice automobile...
The ability to work with engineers on improving a car. Some drivers are better at describing the cars behaviour in such a way, that engineers can devise what to do to improve the car.
Looks like glo-in-the-dark paint to me.
@CmndrFish: You are right, the R/T and SRT-8 are pretty cool cars, but they still have for doors. That wouldn´t be a problem, since very many 4 doors with a big engine are fun cars.
Dan Neil needs to be sprayed with "de-gay".
So no we know what Alan Mullaly had in mind when "hugging" Sergio Marchionne from behind...
@DWBF1: Are you sure it is a Series III? If you look at the large picture, it looks like the headlights are in the middle, so it could be a Series II, no?
It is hard for me to forgive Citroen using the DS badge on a car like this.
Dodge Charger. Oh, wait, they already did that...
@Arfdog: I think they just used what were the easiest jets to get their hands on. With strong backup for the film from the Pentagon, using american jets just was the easiest way to go.
Is that only me, or do the headlights resemble the current Mercedes-Benz C-Class?
@Dan122186: Your reply and the picture you use for your profile justify a heart click.
I heard that Nicolas Cage was broke, but had no idea he needed money THAT bad...
What, no 6.3 Litre naturally aspirated V8? Meeh...
Ok, now, if I were teacher at Springfield elemantary, and OEMs were Bart Simpsons, I would have them write "I will make purpose built cars" a hundred times on the chalkboard.
@Arfdog: That´s correct, but the flyin scenes look much better with real airplanes. I´m glad they used real planes, even if they were no soviet-built fighters.
@Arfdog: Maybe the fact that the cold war was still going on at the time they made Top Gun might have something to do with the poor availability of real MIGs or SUs in Hollywood...
And that is the reason why I dislike marketing guys... They take a name with a heritage and use it in a completely different way, thus betraying the heritage of that name.
@Kraakmo: I don´t know for sure which brand is used here, but Hella would come to my mind. They are used with high beam to lighten the road ahead.
In Soviet Russia, they used this to clean runways