Even though it is in good shape and seems to have been cared for well, no. There is no reason to spend $6500 on a car like this now, perhaps there never was.
Even though it is in good shape and seems to have been cared for well, no. There is no reason to spend $6500 on a car like this now, perhaps there never was.
The best of humanity. +1
I'm fairly certain that Graham Norton Would Rather Hard Drive with Richard Hammond.
My grandparents had a '70 Fury - one of the first cars I ever drove. It was so big I think it had its own solar system.
The town of Centralia, Illinois has a T-33 and a F-105 "Thud" in the city park.
I'm not really convinced that your potential clientele would really care if it was an Italian car or not. It seems to me that most people that would be enthused by having a Quattroporte with a driver for the evening would be a bit horrified by what has been done to this one. Pearl descent, sadly. CP.
That would be a ridiculously one-sided fight, since the Camel was made of stretched and doped canvas on a frame. The whole plane weighs about 1400 pounds. I think the jet blast from a Thunderbolt II would utterly destroy one.
In reading the page referenced above, this is also a replica, not a restoration. Still, it looked beautiful close up. Such a small plane.
There is a beautifully restored Sopwith Camel at the U.S. Air Force Museum in Dayton, along with a whole plethora of other fantastic machines.
"I wish I had four hands, so I could give that crash three thumbs down."
Seriously, you may be a bit too sensitive for the internet.
There are times when one must abandon all common sense. I feel that this is one of those times. NP.
And thus is born a dominatrix.
Kurt Bevacqua, 1975 Bazooka Bubble Gum Blowing Champion, therefore this list is invalid.
I'm sorry, but I gotta ask - did the husband say, "I shoot you - you go down!"
I find ear gauges terrifying to behold.
Kensley Jansen, $416,000: 8 years, 3 months of political contributions