tromoly
tromoly
tromoly

I take motorsports safety seriously.

I’m not following you, are you talking about the So-Cal Belly Tank?

It’s a ‘32 Ford that has had the driver’s seat relocated further back and centered, never knew that a ‘32 Ford looks like a coffin.

Except the roll cage in that car makes it far safer than your street car in a rollover at high speeds.

I put the marker mostly as a joke, considering the video is 24-seconds long.

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Aww, does that mean we won’t see anyone flip off race control like Will Power did back in 2011?

Sort of, F&F said that Roadkill really came about after a few roadtrips for the magazine were video documented (Buick rescue from Rick Pewe’s house, Super Bee trip to Vegas, Crusher Camaro Arizona trip) and well received by the masses, that made the gears start turning for Roadkill.

I think you meant to reply to Patrick, not me......

Keep in mind Roadkill isn’t their “job”, their actual job is putting together a magazine every month.

And by doing that, they don’t need to script anything, they already set what they wan to achieve and they’re doing whatever it takes to get there.

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They make fun of that on Roadkill episode 30 when they visit Rutledge Wood (skip to 20:48 if it gets Kinja’d)

I didn’t imply to make it “mainstream”, what I meant is that Roadkill is a “real” reality show where they don’t script little bits in their adventures, rather they set a deadline/goal and whatever happens along the way happens along the way.

Exactly how I felt the last couple seasons.

/thread

Most often than not the noise limits are local government-imposed, to have repeat offenses does not make the track facility look good. Remember that part about how the noise violations go straight to the police? Would you want to be the people at Spa defending on why they knowingly broke the law with their operation?

After reading the article and noting how the title was changed minutes after posting, it’s clear you feel violated for all of this.

I don’t buy into the Ken Block hype.

e·qui·lib·ri·um (noun): a state in which a process and its reverse are occurring at equal rates so that no overall change is taking place.