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My father in law has a DC2, he got it with I think 30-something thousand miles on it. His son must have been the perfect age for The Fast And The Furious, because he has a Prelude with a body kit he built for drag racing. They are thinking about putting a turbo on the DC2. I haven't managed to talk them out of it, but at least they won't use the original engine. I thought the Corvette would ride pretty smooth with the magnetic suspension. Is it a programming thing that makes it hard?
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# ? May 24, 2016 05:47 |
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# ? Apr 30, 2024 02:14 |
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so that video basically proves that most evo drivers are poo poo and its the car that makes them fast.
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# ? May 24, 2016 06:25 |
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22 Eargesplitten posted:My father in law has a DC2, he got it with I think 30-something thousand miles on it. His son must have been the perfect age for The Fast And The Furious, because he has a Prelude with a body kit he built for drag racing. They are thinking about putting a turbo on the DC2. I haven't managed to talk them out of it, but at least they won't use the original engine. Always feels like a waste to turbocharge a Type R - you get the feeling that they set the entire car up absolutely perfectly for its tires, suspension and brakes from the factory, moreso than any other performance car I've driven. But I can see why people do it - the car drives so well that maybe common logic would suggest more power would make it even better (it doesn't). The normal C7 Corvette runs smoothly, but the Z06 and particularly Z07 are set up to be firm from the factory. The Z07 in 'tour' mode is a little softer than the DC5 but still firm, while in 'track' mode it feels about the same as the DC5, which suits me pretty well. Laserface posted:so that video basically proves that most evo drivers are poo poo and its the car that makes them fast. I think that comes down to demographics - Evos and STis seem to have a lot more of a casual 'cruiser' fanbase (while most Type Rs are raced or crashed while trying to street race). When they get to the track, they quickly find out they've been using about 10% of their car's performance on the road and have no idea what do with the 90% left over - I would guess by his super early braking that's the first time he's braked hard.
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# ? May 25, 2016 01:19 |
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Spades posted:It can do this, yes, but it cannot recreate the thrill of slipping off the brake, missing the shift, grinding the gearbox, locking up the differential and swinging sideways into a sandtrap like real heeltoeing can. lol'd pretty good at this.
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# ? May 25, 2016 17:08 |
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I took the Z07 in to get its plates finally so now apparently JUW843 is its new name. jubei? whatever Either way, this is our weather at the moment: Fortunately, the Z07 package is a well rounded combination and the tires come rain-rated* *Rain rating: 0, safe for none rain This leads to fun and excitement: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=heBdwA8O1pQ On the drive back the rain became extremely heavy and I think that I probably made various finger-shaped indentations in the wheel keeping the car steady. With the tires as they are, it seems to lose traction on one wheel at a time at least rather than completely aquaplaning.
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# ? May 26, 2016 09:58 |
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That looks like it would have been a bit of a hairy ride. Love to see such a cool car over here.
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# ? May 26, 2016 11:03 |
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Spades posted:
Most EVO and STI drivers are idiots frankly. Radiohead71 posted:I'm really hoping and praying for the new, hot 2018 CR-Z, with a slightly de-tuned Civic Type-R engine (280 hp???) and say a conventional 8-sp automatic with flappy paddles (no fing CVTs!!!!). If they bring this out next year I will be the first to deposit/order one. That honestly sounds godawful and yet again the Type-R will have no FWD peer. quote:Always feels like a waste to turbocharge a Type R - you get the feeling that they set the entire car up absolutely perfectly for its tires, suspension and brakes from the factory, moreso than any other performance car I've driven. But I can see why people do it - the car drives so well that maybe common logic would suggest more power would make it even better (it doesn't). Honestly one of hte best comments about the Type-R I have ever read.
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# ? May 26, 2016 11:18 |
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VTEC engines don't really like forced induction but respond quite well to NO2. However as stated Honda deliver the entire package with a Type R not just an engine with a few suspension tweaks.
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# ? May 26, 2016 11:33 |
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Spades posted:Always feels like a waste to turbocharge a Type R - you get the feeling that they set the entire car up absolutely perfectly for its tires, suspension and brakes from the factory, moreso than any other performance car I've driven. But I can see why people do it - the car drives so well that maybe common logic would suggest more power would make it even better (it doesn't). Yeah, I think my father in law was expecting more straight line speed than it actually has. I wouldn't mess with it myself, but he wants to and I'm pretty sure working on cars is how he bonds with his son. They'll probably get some cheap civic engine and turbocharge that.
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# ? May 26, 2016 19:20 |
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While I was waiting for the Z07's plates to get sorted I trundled around the dealership and engaged photographic snoopery. imgur due to huge unresized images: http://imgur.com/a/nttUD
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# ? May 27, 2016 08:51 |
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Spades posted:...On the drive back the rain became extremely heavy and I think that I probably made various finger-shaped indentations in the wheel keeping the car steady. With the tires as they are, it seems to lose traction on one wheel at a time at least rather than completely aquaplaning.
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# ? May 27, 2016 14:56 |
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The squeaking on the DC5's accessory belt was starting to ride my rear end so this weekend I changed it with the aid of a complex set of pulleys to keep the drat autotensioner sorted. Also took out the tensioner bearing and repacked it with grease as it turned out that it had dried up and was due to become a very sheared bearing in the new few hundred kilometres. The headlights had also almost completed their sad descent into yellow opacity (stock photo: ) so I sanded them back with two grains of cutting compounds and then got ready to seal them with self levelling clearcoat. First it was dry Then it was wet and ugly While this was happening I had a beer I had some beer to go with my beer I decided that watching paint dry wasn't so boring, really But then the cold came in because I left the garage door open and slightly clouded the clearcoat, basically ruining everything. gently caress
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# ? Jun 5, 2016 22:19 |
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Hot take: I decided to see how good a mileage I could get by driving the Z06 like a grandma My supercar gets considerably better gas mileage than my hatchback
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# ? Jun 5, 2016 22:25 |
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What grits did you use for the headlights?
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# ? Jun 5, 2016 22:30 |
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Mcqueen posted:What grits did you use for the headlights? Wet sanding with Meguiar's ultimate compound and then polishing compound with a little electric polisher. Could get away with doing it by hand as well, just want to turn the lights on after you're done and make sure there's no cloudy spots or rough patches. Not sure of what the actual grit levels for those two are but the general recommendation is 1000 and 2000. Sanding them will kill the crappy UV protection that still remains so they'll yellow again in a few weeks' time unless you clear coat them. The clear coat is enough to maintain the finish since an old R32 Skyline that I buffed up the same manner still has clear headlights years later (that's about the only part of the car still in decent condition). Whatever cheap $5 can of acrylic clear will do, so long as you don't let a damp breeze cloud the thing up like I did. Some people will balk at the idea of using cutting compound on headlights but gently caress it. Spades fucked around with this message at 22:51 on Jun 5, 2016 |
# ? Jun 5, 2016 22:42 |
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Huh. Figured you need heavier scuffing for the clear to stick...
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# ? Jun 6, 2016 00:48 |
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Having started playing around with launching the Z07, I noticed a bit of a sticky, gravelly feeling changing into 2nd gear at higher speed - with only 3600 kilometres on it'd seem like it's really just the 2nd gear syncro ring hasn't bedded on the cone just yet (typical wear-in that cleans up at about the 10,000k mark). To be sure though, I borrowed a mate's auto pit to flush the trans fluid. Post-drain shot. Huge amount of space around the trans because of the rear end being sized to also fit the A8. Fluid was a bit milky looking - probably contaminated with some part linings and syncro bits. Seemed to clean up a lot after driving but still slightly touchy - apparently this is typical on very heavy duty-level Tremec transmissions though. Front. Oil changes are going to be a hell of a lot less of a pain than the DC5 (For anyone who hasn't done so - the easiest way involves jacking up one side of the car, taking the wheel off and threading your arm around the struts to twist the filter blind and splatter poo poo all over the crossmembers). Steve is always working on about ten cars at once - the 987 Cayman there has its engine out after fun with a spun bearing. GT40. Aftermarket Fuel rail has gone out on the clevo in it - never understand why people don't just put a 427 FE into them. Apparently the plan is to change it to a double quad and, later, see if a modern Coyote can be massaged in with aid of a dry sump. Pretty as fug 964 race car. Body is mostly fibreglass and CF, makes so much lateral grip it'll turn your stomach. Engine dungeon This place has a lot of Porsches A lot of Porsches a lot of porsches If I get the time this weekend I'll be wetvaccing and re-detailing the DC5 as I haven't cleaned it since last trackday and the combination of driving in sleet, gravel rally tracks and using it to transport tires and ancient engine parts has left it looking like a moth orgy. Spades fucked around with this message at 07:02 on Jun 10, 2016 |
# ? Jun 10, 2016 06:47 |
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Spades posted:
I want mates like that, holy poo poo
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# ? Jun 10, 2016 12:39 |
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Today we detailed. As mentioned, since this is my daily driver and general runabout in addition to race car and illegal race car, it tends to get a bit grungy: Hired a wetvac today and went over everything on the inside, and pulled the floormats out and did them separately. In addition to the wetvac foam I used a spray on lifting upholstery cleaner to get some of the grass stained out of the driver's side mat and the grease stains from the seat bolsters. Before on the mats: After: (overcast so it looks a bit dull) In total, a crapload of filth was extracted While the upholstery and carpets were drying, I popped the hood. Engine bays don't really need cleaning, but why not; superficial, non-steam clean later and it's cleaner than the outsides of most cars Anyway, after photos: While I was out buying new eyedrops after accidentally spraying degreaser in my eyes, I noticed this when I got back to the z07 Anyway, I picked up some minor amenities for the car too: A medical kit for when I crash and lose a leg, and TOWEL R Also, interesting note - this car was a track day special in Japan, and amongst other things, the red seats and red carpet are actually swap-ins on the car, which originally had black seats and black carpet - they didn't bother doing the door cards. When the owner had the carpets changed, they also had the driver's seat mounted a few inches lower than default, which makes the car a hell of a lot easier to heel toe and gives a better view on the track. Spades fucked around with this message at 07:42 on Jun 11, 2016 |
# ? Jun 11, 2016 07:31 |
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Huh, I always figured Rug Doctor machines were a US-only thing. That waste tank is identical to the one on the last one I rented, except it said "RENT ME" instead of "HIRE ME". My parents owned a carpet cleaning company when I was growing up, so I've used (and been trained/certified on) commercial and industrial carpet cleaning equipment. The Rug Doctor stuff isn't as good for (household) carpets (but not bad), but for upholstery and cars it's every bit as good as the poo poo the professionals use, assuming you use warm or hot water+chemical mix. Spades posted:Engine bays don't really need cleaning, but why not; superficial, non-steam clean later and it's cleaner than the outsides of most cars I'm pretty OCD about keeping a clean engine bay, personally. Once or twice a year I'll bathe it in degreaser (followed by plain water). My excuse is that keeping everything clean makes it a lot easier to spot oil leaks immediately.
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# ? Jun 11, 2016 08:47 |
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some texas redneck posted:I'm pretty OCD about keeping a clean engine bay, personally. Once or twice a year I'll bathe it in degreaser (followed by plain water). Which brand of degreaser do you use? I used a brand of brake cleaner I've come to trust when sprayed on literally anything - the degrease I've got warns to specifically hose it down and not wipe it off, and it seems to leave residue. Edit: Went for a hardish night drive since I like my fresh detailing wrapped in bugs and brake dust. Parking garages' flood lightning makes reflections happen. Spades fucked around with this message at 09:37 on Jun 11, 2016 |
# ? Jun 11, 2016 09:13 |
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Dang that's a good looking car.
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# ? Jun 11, 2016 13:06 |
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Spades posted:Hot take: I decided to see how good a mileage I could get by driving the Z06 like a grandma I just putted home in sport mode without paying attention and noticed when I stopped at the offramp (about 40 miles later) that I was getting 25.8 MPG. Lifetime average on the thing hovers just shy of 18mpg though. But count me in with the "never thought I'd buy a corvette" club. I cross shopped it against a new M4 and Cayman, but it was tough to find a Porche in a manual and I just prefered the character of the C7 over the BMW. I've since updated the license plate. Since, you know, my backpack's got jets:
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# ? Jun 16, 2016 22:24 |
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Linux Nazi posted:
with optional
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# ? Jun 17, 2016 03:30 |
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Given what mileage the Z06 can manage, I imagine the C7 can practically be classified as an economy car. Looks pretty good though - the white seems to fit the C7 a lot more nicely than it does the Z06. Minor update also - next time I get some time home I'm thinking of polishing the turd - cleaning out the Commodore and vinylspraying the insides to satin black to hide all the disease then popping the air cleaner, carb and head to bust the rust off and engine enamel them all. Ideally want to sell it for more than the cost of those cans of spraypaint. Prognosis: unlikely.
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# ? Jun 18, 2016 00:03 |
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Spades posted:Which brand of degreaser do you use? Whatever they use at the self-service car wash.
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# ? Jun 18, 2016 02:26 |
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Deciding to do something with the disease festival to maybe make it actually sellable without paying somebody to take it, I took a look at it while I was home this weekend. aaaghh We wetvacced And some minor vinyl and carpet refurb was done Old aircleaner and carb is going to be replaced with a Weber and a Mercedes supercharger will be sandwiched in there, because why not. Suspension bushings have been replaced, power steering seems to have been instructed to stop leaking successfully. Head needs to be popped off and de-crapped. Going to degrease/brake clean the entire engine bay and respray it in black. Also the dashboard needs to be re-fitted since it's missing some parts, the seats need to be replaced and the outside paint will need to be redone in boatpaint best of paints Spades fucked around with this message at 06:06 on Jul 11, 2016 |
# ? Jul 11, 2016 06:00 |
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New seats picked up from a wrecker for about $200 - the ones in the car are too shithouse to respray and finding one that matches the other would require too much work. Smashed all the plastic fittings (they were brittle enough to break on the slightest torquing anyway) and hit the whole thing with penetrating spray and sandpaper, smacked loose the rails with a rubber mallet and lubed everything up, then bathed it all in brake cleaner and sprayed on some metal paint. Going to need a bottle jack and a vice to break loose the driver's seat's riser sometime in future as the whole gear winder has completely rusted to a block - a super common occurrence with cheap holden seats. Tomorrow if it stops raining for the first time this year, going to hit the seats with vinyl spray and blacken them out to fit the rest of the inside. Also - Supercharger is a little Eaton M82. Hoping that it'll make some boost - the Holden 3.3/202 is a little bigger than the 2.3 Mercedes engines it's usually on but it shouldn't need much work given the compression on the 202 is only a little higher than atmospheric. Spades fucked around with this message at 21:42 on Jul 15, 2016 |
# ? Jul 15, 2016 08:06 |
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Result acceptable, time to buy even more vinyl stain though
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# ? Jul 16, 2016 02:21 |
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You're doing the lords work here son. Also if you need any more VK parts, you're welcome to anything you can take off mine. it's upside down about 20m down a bank on the Tapu-Coroglen road
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# ? Jul 24, 2016 08:44 |
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slothrop posted:You're doing the lords work here son. Also if you need any more VK parts, you're welcome to anything you can take off mine. the natural home of all commodores.
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# ? Jul 24, 2016 11:47 |
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What the hell is that round, white thing on your storm door?
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# ? Jul 25, 2016 01:43 |
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oRenj9 posted:What the hell is that round, white thing on your storm door? Cat or dog door maybe?
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# ? Jul 25, 2016 02:59 |
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When I was back in the Bay for a while last weekend I saw an unrusted, uncrashed looking Silvia for sale for $2k, which is a little under half of what most of them seem to sell for. An auto non-turbo with buggered paint, I figured it was worth doing some quick poking and selling it off again later to some minor profit and the value of the experience itself. So I put together a list of things to check over for my father to pick the car up in my absence. Dad received the list, ignored it and bought the car after ascertaining it was roughly the size and shape of a 90's Nissan. welp, projectCarCount++; i am going to start investing in boat paint futures More photos: http://imgur.com/a/MEEhT
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# ? Jul 25, 2016 20:40 |
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Ohhhhh it has Advans too!
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# ? Jul 25, 2016 20:46 |
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Silver advans hand painted black, no less I'm probably going to head to the bay this weekend and see how much I can get done. Going to build a new boot liner and install the new seatbelt. Also going to try to find some stock Silvia wheels to replace them with so I can go mad with the metal polish and sell them online as refurbs. Since I haven't actually popped the hubs off I'm kind of apprehensive if I'm going to be met with some horrific cross-drilled five stud/four stud shear-fest, if it's going to be a four stud V2 (Which I don't think exists), or if the car's running five studs after all. Edit: Super Advans, not V2s. Apparently pretty rare and mechanically very sound wheels but so ugly. Spades fucked around with this message at 21:24 on Jul 28, 2016 |
# ? Jul 25, 2016 21:05 |
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Due to arriving home late and having to fit in 9 hours of work I didn't get most of what I was trying to do, as expected - Turns out the front fenders can be completely removed from the car without removing the bumper - except that's a lie. The bumper conceals a single bolt for some reason which makes removal of the front fenders impossible. Considering potentially tapping a thread into some metalwork nearby in a location that won't be occluded by the bumper so it's not such a process. Removed the bumper, found some rust on the mounts (likely caused by the motion in the headlights rubbing the paint off the front clip). Bumper had a crack I hadn't noticed so epoxy welded a metal shim to realign the whole bumper and strengthen it in future. Bapped the fender dent out and repainted the inside and outside. Used this as a chance to test the boat paint was compatible with the car's old paint - seems to have worked. Will actually use a spray gun next time instead of a brush but a heavy primer layer is needed as the dent carries further than the picture suggest. Do not use a brush for painting a car. You will have a bad time Polished the headlights to reverse the UV stainage and tried out the new clear coat I bought. Turns out Lyndar clearcoat is absolute loving dog poo poo and not only clouded but also later cracked while setting, giving my headlights the same kind of finish as a broken fishbowl from 1920. Can't be arsed to re-sand and start over so they'll stay horrible for now. Spades fucked around with this message at 08:19 on Jul 30, 2016 |
# ? Jul 30, 2016 07:44 |
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I decided to go along to an expedition day to see how the Z06 would do on a glorified indian lap Whilst doing so the expedition day turned into an actual trackday And with the Z06, the nice thing is that instead of cursing the semi-slick-clad, caged up bastards with their unfairly power-to-weighted race cars, you just pass all of them and then get bored and pit out However, it also has put me into the sad contingent of people who have fast cars but no talent. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NbGxS0W1YzU Also bonus video where I thought my diff had exploded https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GxxXOuKr_M4 Interestingly for the event though, looking at the attendance I actually had a pretty middle of the road level of power but generally didn't have any trouble in catching up or passing anyone - could either just be being able to put the power down, or just having more of a death wish. I don't think many cars were actually stock with exception of mine. Spades fucked around with this message at 11:25 on Aug 7, 2016 |
# ? Aug 7, 2016 09:11 |
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Love that the traction light is always on.
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# ? Aug 7, 2016 12:54 |
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# ? Apr 30, 2024 02:14 |
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Some of my passengers on the passenger laps were exciteable https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YQtEVmjnI3U
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# ? Aug 7, 2016 21:26 |