I might actually watch these shows if they cut out the dumb ass drama and concentrated on the cars and craftsmanship.
I might actually watch these shows if they cut out the dumb ass drama and concentrated on the cars and craftsmanship.
You must live in Must-Quote-The-Entire-Post-So-I-Can-Add-A-Two-Sentence-Reply-Land.
R8 FTW.
In my first duty station in the Army we had a few Humvees, but then we also had something much much cooler: a Ford Econoline E350 with heavy duty suspension, all wheel drive, a low range transfer case, and all terrain tires.
Duh. Obviously everyone's favorite evil villain car, the Mini Moke!
Giddyup.
Luxury cruise liner.
26th October 1939: A woman driving the new solution to the problem of wartime petrol rationing, the midget car. This tiny vehicle can cover eighty miles on a gallon of petrol and achieves speeds of up to 45 miles per hour.
+1 for correct punctuation.
Teenagers'.
The correct answer to the question is, and will forever be E39 BMW M5
I understand that this is a car blog and that you cover all aspects of car culture, but I kinda think that this is one of the few things that is better left unpublicized. Internet fame is all these jackasses are after, and any mention of them (even when followed by stern warnings that what they did is stupid and no…
"Well Rick, this here looks to be an SE30, probably late 20th century, I'd guess circa 1994. It's a rare bird, introduced as a limited edition to celebrate 30 years of Lamborghini not going entirely bankrupt. They were mostly bought by arrogant American stock brokers who forgot that the 80s were over and who went…
The Clutch Pedal.
It'd be one hell of a landing, no arresting gear landing on a Carrier?
If an Air Force pilot drops it on the deck of a carrier he's even further off course than the Air Force pilot above landing the Globemaster at the wrong airport.
Beat me to it you bastard. Also, Texas.
Here's something else fascinating about the humble traffic light: it's way older than you'd think. The first traffic light appeared in 1868, and while that doesn't exactly predate cars, it certainly predates, by a long shot, even the slightest mass adoption of cars. Aside from the very rare steam-powered omnibus, the…
Tokyo?! Tokyo has the most amazing system to be built on this earth. 13 privately owned railway companies all working together for the betterment of a city. Over 290 rail stops, 330 km of line and a timetable you can set your watch to.
If you are uncomfortable at the wheel, stop the f'ing car. She's passing two solid white lines per second, ish, and using the 10ft/30ft measurement (10ft line, 30ft gap), she's doing 80 feet per second, or about 54mph.