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Showing posts from July 3, 2024

New Toyota GR GT Supercar: The Soul Of 2000GT And LFA Is Coming Back

Full Restoration of a 50 Year Old BMW From Start to Finish by Professionals

Lotus Evija X Takes on the Nürburgring

CORVETTE Grand Sport Vintage RACE CAR by SUPERFORMANCE

When Mercedes Made Cars With N/A V12"s | 1999 SL 600 Review

IS THIS THE BEST '90s SUPERCAR?!

Omoda 7 | Ecco dal vivo la CROSSOVER Plug-in Hybrid

Land Rover Defender OCTA Revealed With 626 Horsepower

What Koenigsegg Jesko's New Record Can Teach the Entire Car Industry

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Every Angle of Touring Superleggera

2024 GMC Hummer EV SUV Review: A $110,000 Beast that Nobody Will Buy

Manual Gearboxes Are Back! Aston Martin Valour vs Porsche 911 S/T

2024 Land Rover Defender OCTA | First Look

1967 Chevrolet Camaro Running Footage

New Audi RS Q8 Performance is the Fastest SUV on the Nuerburgring

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The 9th Dream Car from the Top 10: GM-X Stiletto

When we think of dream cars, our minds often race to sleek designs, innovative technology, and that unmistakable feeling of pure, unbridled passion. The GM-X Stiletto encapsulates all of these elements and more, making it a worthy contender in our top ten list. Ranked at number nine, this concept car from 1964 remains a beacon of automotive ingenuity and a symbol of a bygone era that continues to inspire. A Journey Back to the Jet Age To fully appreciate the GM-X Stiletto, we must travel back to the 1950s and '60s, a time when America was captivated by the future. The jet-age was in full swing, and cars were designed with a sense of bold optimism. Under the visionary leadership of Harley Earl and Bill Mitchell, General Motors created vehicles that mimicked the sleek lines and advanced technologies of jet aircraft. The GM-X Stiletto, born in 1964, was a product of this era's boundless imagination. The Visionary Design The GM-X Stiletto was first unveiled at the 1964-1965 World’s...

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Chevrolet Concept Cars: Ten Of Our Favorites

Most celebrations of Chevrolet's centennial surround the automaker's production vehicles. Why not? After all, this is the brand that birthed legends like the Bel Air, Corvette, and Camaro, among others. Those vehicles are certainly worth celebrating, but we can't help but wonder: what about the Chevrolet cars that never saw a production line? We've scoured through the history books (and our memory banks) to pick out ten of our all-time favorites.

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1985 Audi Sport Quattro: The Group B Homologation Special

In Austria in 1980, just a year after four-wheel drive cars became eligible to compete in the WRC, Audi debuted the first Quattro rally car and forever changed the sport. Over the next half of the decade (and onwards, if you count the Pikes Peak specials), these Audis would be subjected to a period of rapid iterative evolution that led to the short-wheelbase Sport Quattro models that helped define the infamously fast and dangerous era of Group B rallying. The relatively lax nature of the Group B regulations gave rise to a number of downright ferocious cars from Audi’s competitors (most notable being Lancia and Peugeot), and while it was not the most successful nor technologically advanced of these top tier cars by the end of the Group B era, the Sport Quattro is a worthy poster child for the lot of them—being first to the punch has its advantages. The advent of the Group B class provided manufacturers with practically every leeway imaginable given they adhered to a basic s...

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