I'm glad it's only silver. It is was dark gray, my world would implode from the desirability of this car.
I'm glad it's only silver. It is was dark gray, my world would implode from the desirability of this car.
@Xander Crews: Come to Palmdale, California. We have TWO parked outside, and we don't give a fuck.
Too many good answers on here. The correct answer, therefore, is all of them (except 3ers, which are always Alpenweiss). Therefore, I'll just have to go with the best individual brown car, which is, of course, the Gene Genie's Cortina.
@racin_g73: Hey, where have you been? Good to have you back, and with a Rushmore avatar, nonetheless! Props.
Please nobody make a tasteless joke about how Eastern Texas did, in fact, get a space shuttle. That would be bad... very bad.
I'm 6'2", and I fit comfortably in a GTS with the top on. Never sat in a GTB though.
Agreed 100% I loved the LS for the same reason, and there are unfortunately no understated luxury cars anymore. Every car these days is designed by marketing men, not engineers.
Lots of good ones on here, so it takes some effort to find something unique.
@StreetsideStig: Unrelated, but your mention of late 80's Honda rear view mirrors reminded me of something.
1:34 made me lol.
Here's a history of the build from start to finish.
No.
Peanut butter and honey would not be a very good one for me, because I would be unable to go more than 6 hours without eating it ALL.
On another note... Rusty was a rat-rod. Owner should rebuild it for legendary rat-rod god status.
@snapoversteer, Arbiter of D'Elegance: Are you Beryl Green?
Just had my 27th birthday, and the number currently stands at 13:
What's with all the hate? Not all cyclists like to put on an Astana jersey to ride a $4000 carbon rig down to the Starbucks to sip on non-fat lattes. There are some of us that like to throw a banged-up old handmade chromoly hardtail into the back of a 4Runner, go up into the mountains, ride an XC race with no shirt,…
The NeXT station a failure? I disagree. Commercially, it was without doubt, but I would argue that it had a more influential legacy than almost any other retail computer. Not only for the fact that OPENSTEP architecture lies underneath OSX, but that it played a critical role in Jobs's return to Apple Computer, Inc.…