Supercomputer power in this van!
Supercomputer power in this van!
Please Kinja insert this time... please.
Maybe not.
This time maybe...
Damn Kinja, why don't you show my photo?
This is my own 1981 E21 with a carburated 1.8 - 316 in the euro nomenclature. It's light, nimble and tail happy - just perfect for twisty backroads. It is dead easy to work on, and parts are widely available too, so it's a great choise for the casual weekend mechanic like me. Needless to say, I'm in love with it!
Oh my God, theese Federal bumpers looks downright scary.
Your turn Lada!
Your turn Lada!
You can also get it with whopping 75 hp. Well, is that sporty? Ehm...
A guy in my area used a long wheelbase Series III to haul a deltatrike around in a similar fashion.
This housing block was bulit in 1970 in a Budapest suburb with pre-fab technology. It saw a complete energy-efficiency makover in 2009, along with a tetris-inspired restyling.
This is how you do it!
God, this telly is insanely huge. I know the Europa is tiny, but still.
I'd like to see the same drivetrain hooked up with the tiny Up! city car. That combo would make a hip and fully usable econobox. Tucking the battery pack under floor woul'd be a little tricky, but does't seem impossible. Maybe next year in Geneva!
I bet it looks silly whitout covers, symply because the rear tyres sit so deep inside the body.
Well, when the girl started making coffe(!?) onboard, my brain stopped working. If there was a paralell universe where every single item is designed by Rinspeed, I'd like to try it for one day.
What it is exatly? Looks awesesome anyway!
Right said.
Not a classic science fiction, but in Moonwalker Jacko morphs into a replica of the 1970 Bertone Stratos Zero. If it's not madness, I don't what is.