tballz1969
Tballz
tballz1969

Perhaps there is some value in using the brand recognition and history of lotus adding handling input to major manufacturer's cars, like Lotus did in the 80's. I can imagine a performance Jag or Aston, or even a ZO6, with a performance pack labeled 'handling by Lotus' might get the company some more cash and the

I'm not a fan of the stance look, but surely there are more pressing police matters in that city than a bunch of people with lowered cars.

First they must change the seat angle and distance between rows to make it possible to open and use a laptop on the damn plane.

Meh. For that kind of money you could get a brand new miata club edition with a warranty and all. I have a soft spot for the X19, as my dad had one when I was a kid, but it isn't soft enough to drop 26,500 on one.

Cool article. I would love to know what kind of lap times a "no rules, no restrictions" F1 format car could do, especially if incorporating some if the computer controlled stuff mentioned in the article. My guess is that the car would perform beyond the limits where a human could actually pilot it.

I imagine "hackers" could similarly tell the computer to open all the fuel injectors on full blast until gas pours all over the hot engine creating a "hacked gasoline based IED", and this may be the cause of the missing Malaysian Air flight in the south Pacific.

Glad it didn't gain a ton of weight, but any weight gain isn't good for a car that is already a bit heavy. I can't wait for some of the aluminum technology from the F150 and other light weight tech to make it to the mustang.