kvnsdlr001
John Coctostan
kvnsdlr001

I would buy THAT new.

I had higher hopes for the Volvo.

The Abarth would beg to differ.

NC actually has one of the largest collection of SF operators on the East Coast. The largest collection of PhD's in the Triangle and is a technology hub. A lot of farmland and country folk but to lump everyone into one box is not a very accurate take on the region.

Having once landed at Edenton and spending a few days there with my unit, there are quite a few odd things and shadowy shit going down around that Coast Guard base. A sleepy town with a lot going on behind the scenes.

Some 'roads' you can drive the piss out of you simply cannot keep then at 9 and 3, you would crash.

I saw one last month.

I have a couple I have yet to see thrown up here.

I see them pretty regularly in Atlanta, 1st and 2nd generations. It still holds up in the looks department today. Cool car.

All of them.

I do think NASCAR is terribly boring if you are watching.

RHD, Canadian, 2JZ, stock, it ticks all of the boxes. $50K in ten years time.

I was thinking of hooning it for a short while and then mothballing it for ten years. A proper collectible.

What did you do to the front end?

I just made an offer. What a rare car for the asking. Like a Mach 1 she will be worth $ in the immediate future.

My personal opinion here is that if you think you can hover a car on the razors edge around an oval or some shape, then you and I agree it is shit. Now, turn the wick up times three and we are all careening off the track and proven wrong on every level we know existed. There is real talent here if only turning left.

Now playing

DeMuro, with all due respect, shut your whore mouth. Really, concept cars are the catalyst that drives innovation and new ideas along with practical design and the ability to leave the thought box behind. Concept cars, 'I am for 'em'. In my best Hedburg voice. Club sandwich reference if the video Kinja's.

I was just about to research the Mercedes top speed cars and you went there, top-notch.

Wired has a couple of write ups on meta data that are rather eye opening. This is no different.