It’s also great because of how it can be recycled. 75% of all the aluminum ever made in the U.S. is still in use today.
It’s also great because of how it can be recycled. 75% of all the aluminum ever made in the U.S. is still in use today.
Millennials (Gen Y) are people born approx. from the early 80s to the mid-to-late 90s. Gen Z are those born from the late 90s/2000 to today.
It was live broadcast on YouTube yesterday and Saturday. If you go to MotorTrend’s channel I think they reposted the coverage.
No joke, a guy around here owns Dennis Rodman’s old VW Beetle and it has a similar paint job to this, but the car right now has vinyl wrap over the offensive parts of the paint job. So right now it looks like a yellow Beetle with blue flames, but really those flames have many boobs under the vinyl.
I have to agree with you. I love the ridiculousness of it.
One of my professors worked for Ford in the early 90s. He told us about them buying an NSX when it first debuted and found a giant saw and chopped the thing in half, lengthwise. They did this to figure out how Honda assembled the aluminum chassis. They did this without performance testing first. So there was an…
Yes, all of today’s music is produced by Skrillex and features Rick Ross. They are the only artists left in the music industry.
Lots of RWB Porsche owners track their cars. RWB stuff is another class than something like a cheapo bodykit.
I loved it too! That car is strictly Function or Form.
You can see the company name “Cigarette” in four of the images in this article.
Thank you for this.
R5 and R2 are what M-sport, the preparer of the cars, calls the different spec cars you can get. The have the Fiesta R1, R2, and R5.
I think it was a Mazda/Ford co-op design. Because the Mazda trucks of the same era were identical to the Courier.
HAHAHAHA, I love how the SR5 trim was too “Opulent” for Motor Week’s taste. If only their late 80s selves could see the 4Runner today.
No Jezza would drive a Merc. May would drive the Ferrari and Hamster of course would drive the Porsche, unless a Mustang was nearby, then maybe he would go for that.
Because they’ve been making tractors longer than they have been making cars? Lamborghini Trattori founded in 1948 and now owned by S.A.M.E., while Automobili Lamborghini was founded in 1963 and now owned by Audi. It’s like how Mitsubishi and Mistubishi Fuso are totally different companies.
I think the problem is that they give to much volume to the straight cut gear noise. In real life, yes straight cut transmissions are crazy loud, sometimes louder than the engine inside the car, but in a video game people don’t want to listen to gear whine all the time.
There was something like this in Boise, ID at one point. The old drive-in theater lot had become a place you could leave your car with a price and contact info in the window. There were usually 10-20 cars there at a time.
Those are screens, not windows, shown above. The screens are just displaying what you would be seeing if they were windows. That way you won’t feel trapped in a tube.
Race cars like this don’t run blow-off/bypass valves. Those help reduce the stress on the turbo when you let off the throttle. The turbos in a race car only need to last a weekend instead of 150k miles. By not using a blow-off valve you can keep the boost pressure up between shifts, so it reduces the lag until you hit…