towman
towman
towman

Great video, the op tempo is way more relaxed then a line unit would be, it is a rare sight to see deck personnel "casually" strolls by :)

Kinda make sense, made to order + lot of hand assembly = no need to ramp up production line with robots and what not, in that sense 25k is not that much. It will be a rare sight on the street, most likely a collector's bike.

I wonder how much that engine is restricted (it has to be, same size naturally aspirated engines makes 200+ Hp on this segment, that supercharger has to push this thing well beyond that), and how much can you de-restrict, once you ready to die.

RIP, great memories, I will keep listening to the reruns until NPR plays them.

Great article, the lack of "little birds" presence is disturbing, specially since the 160th SOAR is involved.

Well, that was Dacia specific comment actually, since some of the parts were exchangeable with Renault parts. My father got his new Dacia, we drove it to my grandpa's place, he had a nicely equipped garage and we worked on that car for 3 days, before it was ready for the streets :)

I lived in Hungary for the first 20 years of my life, we owned all three of these cars at one time or another, experience speaking...

Appendix A:

Shoot where there is the most quiet...

Charger Hellcat, you can cook stuff on the supercharger:

Two and four legged badasses all around.

Hmm, we need the picture of Jeremy's painting after Hammond "fixed" it in the Vietnam special.

Great find, I never thought I'm going to see the Hind in USCG colors. not many airframe could do a better "show of force" than the Mi-24. I had these thunder over my head couple of times in my time in the service (Hungary), and they are loud, scary and intimidating as a helicopter can possibly be.

80's Audi Quattro

How about the terra modena 450cc supermoto, the engine was Ferrari designed:

Lock-on Modern Air Combat:

How do you know he isn't driving for Marussia in Bianchi's place (don't hate me)... After wrestling bears bear hand ;) and flying fire tankers, how hard could it be?

I'm curious about how they clean up the place after a crash like this, I mean a lot of harmful chemicals get on ground with this fuel, lubricants, etc. Does the USAF has a land restoration team, or the Army engineering corps are handling it, or they hire contractors to do this? Anyone here actually has experience with

Whoever voted NP on this should put down the CP...