Does the "10 years" rule apply to when the car was introduced? Or when production ends? I ask because the Enzo is technically more than 10 years old and could probably be taken off the list.
Does the "10 years" rule apply to when the car was introduced? Or when production ends? I ask because the Enzo is technically more than 10 years old and could probably be taken off the list.
Early Audi R8s. GTRs. 360 Challenge Stradales. Early Paganis. Maserati MC12s. Aston Martin DB AR1. Ford GT. BMW Z8. Gallardo LP550-2. Range Rover Evoque. Lotus Elise. Those are some good ones.
F355.
New Viper, LFA and the new Vanquish.
Jeez. Latarian's grandmother didn't learn. Just give the kid his chicken nuggets and he won't smash your truck.
Silverstone had a reconfiguration pretty recently (like 2 years or so) so there aren't too many serious production car lap times recorded since it's reconfiguration. Fifth Gear's Jason Plato recorded a time of 2:22.14 in a Noble M600. Mind you that car is 650 HP and 2,800 lbs dry, no ABS or driver aids. The Noble is…
Well they already changed the question from Fastest to Quickest. So I don't think they are really looking at technicalities. On that note though this '66 nova is prob top 20 or 30 quickest "Road Legal" cars in America. There are a handful of Supras and Vipers than would have this car handily.
That car is located in the UK, not in America.
The Ronin Exige has been basically totaled so I can't think of a reason you would mention it other than shamelessly giving Drive a plug. Don't get me wrong, I love Drive. But a 680HP Exige isn't is the same league as some of the fastest straight line speed cars in America. But straight line speed is a vague term. So…
Agreed.
Sonata. No question about it.
$90K for a Gallardo, $49K for a F355, $38K for an E60 M5, $30K for a Maserati Spyder and $38K on a Lotus Elise. If you're going for a lot of cars.
Yeah Adam Carolla daily for the past 2.5-3 years. Get it on!