speedzonevideo
Speed Zone
speedzonevideo

@Turbineguy - now with Firefox!: It was entombed as a part of Tulsa Oklahoma's 50 year time capsule. It was unearthed in 2007 after having been buried new with just 7 or 8 miles on the clock outside the Tulsa courthouse in 1957. There is an incredible story behind it, best to look up "Tulsarama" and "Miss Belvedere"

Moral of the story: It doesn't matter what your doing, or how your doing it. If you act like an insufferable asshole you'll be treated like one!

So after all that did seeing the condition of Miss Belvedere make you feel any better about your challenge? After all, it could have been worse! Perspective?

My turn!

@WarpedCore: Ford! American made..... in Brazil!

Aww christ here we go again! look don't get too exited, even if they build the damn thing it wont look anything near as nice as the prototype looks.

@Steve_in_NC: I WANT A CAR WITH 4 FU*^#NG WHEELS AND A SEAT! RIGHT FU*#%ING NOW!

Production value: good, Cross-section of automotive tastes: not bad, Personality of the presenters: Mmmmm-no!

At the risk of sounding cliche' an old friend had one like this many, many years ago. It was a land yacht by every measurable standard, and left really long burnout marks on the road.

If a car is a "gal" what does he call his wife? People like this give small business in general a bad name.

You too can put your life in the hands of a high mile sedan with extensive modifications performed by some random asshole with unknown skills that hoons the hell out of his now for sale, and questionably treated, cream puff of a BMW. Go on, it's safe! Take a guess, Crack Pipe? —— naaaaaah!

Hey, they threw away a real nice kiddie-pool.

Ill tell you what I really miss about classic "SUV's". I miss the days we didn't call cars with big tires trucks, or trucks with carpeted floor mats and digital instrumentation family cars. For that matter any of the niche' segment crossovers that that try's to fill some gap in the market segment which make us part

Yea! if you believe this one I have another story to tell. Grrrrr - dubbed!

It was no mystery in the 70's when Toyota took styling cues from the Mustang to create the Celica. Toyota believed that American styling was the best way to market their cars at the time.