philphil
philphil
philphil

Hey, wow! The big-mostly-fake-grille is a slightly-better-hidden bumper!

That’s strange. Honda hired an eight year old with ADHD as their design chief and didn’t even mention it in their company newsletter.

2001 GTI VR6. Fun and snappy, nice mateials, etc etc. But man, in 90 kilomiles I bought two catalytic converters and three coil packs. It also barfed out all its coolant in the parking lot at work. All thos despite being owned by an enthusiast that was obsessive about maintenance. The engine light was near-constant

Painted brake drums.

The Lexus grille is already turbo-ugly. The rest of the car might as well catch up.

But inside, it gets new seats to replace the ones that were very uncomfortable before, a new steering wheel, a bunch of new materials, and artificial noise pumped in through the speakers.

Bumper-obviously-through-big-fake-grille wrecks it for me. Covering a structural member in black plastic doesn’t magically make it an intake.

What the fugly????

Surely the production version will have some kind of retarded huge fake grille with an obvious bumper jammed through the middle of it, right? Everybody’s doin’ it! Here, let me get that for you...

Those Lexi are nice - from the side. The Lexus massive-fake-grill-that’s-mostly-bumper is still butt fugly, though.

Wrong. The first time I saw them, I was amazed at how ugly they were. They wrecked a perfectly good ellipse and made it a wonky, partly-round, partly-angular mess.

I would like to contribute some velocity stack pron, from The Hawk at Road America 2014.

A). There’s nothing more expensive than a cheap Porsche.

“I transformed my feet with two affordable exterior swaps!”

I’ll mourn the loss of this dillhole right after I finish weeping for all the malaria-carrying mosquitoes squished by flyswatters.

Forever wedges. <3

Sooo, if you rent out your supercar to just any knucklehead who can scrape together the rental fee, it will eventually be destroyed.

Well spotted.

It has 12 “scenes” are described of a possible future where the rollout of autonomous vehicles has “led to unexpected, and in some cases, controversial events.