Matti-trainwreck-Mills
Matti_Mills
Matti-trainwreck-Mills

My dad bought a 540i 6spd in January 2000. Simply put, the car was really incredible. Super smooth on the freeway, power to hoon and stunningly beautiful. He did a number of tasteful modifications which included mild power increases over time. He sold it, to a fellow enthusiest, a couple years ago and replaced it

Fortunately, they caught the perpe'tator.

Wha!? Anyway, I know very well what went into the makings of the unit as we were a beta site at the time. You're not waking anyone up over here. It's sad how there is always some lonely "know it all" that feels compelled to sarcastically educate others. You and your anger issues can fall back to your amateur nerd

Here's a fun one that is a little more on the "econo" side. How about a 2003-2003.5 Mazdaspeed Protege? If you can find one that hasn't been molested too badly, and still low-ish mileage, you're going to have a fantastically reliable car, with great hoonability. It's still a little bit of an old-school Mazda in the

I agree. Here's my Dodge stealth in it's almost Chumpcar race ready condition.

I still have mine. :P (forgo the grime stickers, that's all gone - not proud of that phase)

Its not brown or even stock but this should be enough to punch its card for all eternity.

I miss the hell out of my '93 Dodge Stealth R/T.

Lol yeah looking across the dash was like looking across a vast tundra. It just went on forever.

Literally ALL I remember about my high school best friend's brother's TranSport was that seemingly infinite dashboard top... God help you if you dropped a pencil on there, because after it finally stopped rolling days later when it reached the windshield, it was beyond any recovery effort.

This is from Finland, (and I DO apologize for my countryman's terrible taste in white trash Finnish music) but alas, not a poor country.
I'd recon those tires will most likely be used in amateur rally/folkrace.
The sign on the background says "car disposal shop" so most likely they are re-purposing old tires from

I can't say for sure not knowing the person other from his videos. But he could be fitting those tires to a car or kart or any other not road legal vehicle he uses to have fun on his own land (in the field). So nothing is preventing you from doing this if you don't use them on public roads or sell them afterwards.

Finland is far from a "poor" country. Besides, the average Finn's car control skills could recover the skid, I can't say the same for the latte sipping suburban dad from Mission Viejo whose maxed-out credit card forced him to buy used tires for his Range Rover.

This is in Finland, so... no cheap labor. It's not a scam either, just someone doing it on his own tires.

This was actually filmed in Finland. And the person doing this is well aware of the risks of regrooving/re-treading and is NOT, I repeat NOT doing this to sell them afterwards as new tires. He's just demonstating the method at which even car tires were regrooved back in the days when safety was not a concern and it

I drive one everyday, and while the frunk is not very wide, it's incredibly deep and easily swallows up a full cart of groceries. The extra room in the hatch is great and can be fitted to hold a spare (in mine I keep a car cover, a pair of shoes and a jacket). Throw on the roof mounted tire rack/luggage pod and it's

Damn, beat me to it, almost the same wording and everything

Porsche Cayman. Two Trunks!

Missing a connecting flight can be a costly delay, especially for business travelers who have someplace they need to be at a specific time. Also, missing the last connecting flight of the day to your final destination means that you need to secure overnight lodging, which isn't exactly cheap near the airport. There