lonestranger
lonestranger
lonestranger

Quit mandating stupid shit on to cars. ABS, SRS, ESC, backup cameras, excessive rollover protection, excessive side-impact protection, pedestrian protection, etc. all add needless cost, complexity, weight, and interfere (often unsafely so) with the act of DRIVING THE GODDAMNED VEHICLE.

Totally Bigfoot.

Lukla might look familiar if you've seen the fictional Kyrat Airport in Far Cry 4.

I understand that not everyone knows everything about every sport, and that's fine. I'm just explaining why someone would think you were "living under a rock". To answer your question "why would I?", you would've seen that nose if you saw a Lotus in any of the 19 races of the last year's season.

That article is almost exactly a year old. You and anyone else who wondered about it have had sufficient time to ask and/or find the answer to your query.

Apparently, it takes two six(!) different voice actors to play a character that has barely said a word?

I had a brain fart and read the title as "Broken Lizard..."

This is the best part right here. It's a VW, and proud of it. The huge "R" looked too ambiguous on the side of a race car.

rad/s, not rads.

His name isn't 3.14 rads, it's 3.14 rad/s (radians per second).

Starred for your realization that the car pictured is the point of the article.

No shit, it's an XJR-15. Spoiler alert: that's not a production Diablo, LFA, C7, or NSX, either.

Nor does the article contain photos of a production Diablo, LFA, Z06, or NSX, for reasons that should be obvious.

1: Slinging the bikes over the tailgate is quick and easy, and holds the bikes relatively securely. When shuttling bikes up to the head of a downhill run multiple times a day, a rack is too finicky and time-consuming. Simply placing the bikes together unsecured inside the box smashes the shit out of them, a non-no

Counterpoint: it looks like it would take some abuse well. If you were a mountain biker with a new Raptor, you might not need one of those Dakine tailgate guards.

That's what hinterland means. It's a German word for the land in back of, or behind, a port or city. Similar English words would be back-country or backwoods.

Thanks, but there's already been an SOA-esque game, and it was pretty damn good.