1933 Ford Coupe
1933 Ford CoupeIt’s weird how the wheels of hot rodding can turn in ways that change lives and create new trends. It’s weird how the wheels of hot rodding can turn in ways that change lives and create new trends. Read more
1933 Ford CoupeIt’s weird how the wheels of hot rodding can turn in ways that change lives and create new trends. It’s weird how the wheels of hot rodding can turn in ways that change lives and create new trends. Read more
Filed under: Japan, Videos, Honda Honda’s wonderfully simple, fun ads are not in short supply right now. We showed you Hands, the followup to 2003’s The Cog, last week. If you haven’t had a chance to look at those two Read more
Filed under: Concept Cars, Convertible, SUV, Geneva Motor Show, Land Rover, Luxury Ignoring the lessons learned from the Nissan Murano CrossCabriolet, it appears Land Rover may be about to greenlight production of the Range Rover Evoque Convertible. At least, that’s Read more
I’m not going to get overly sentimental or nostalgic, but a mechanic’s shop is more than just a place where cars are repaired. Read more…
Information is still coming in about Asiana Flight 214. KTVU, a news channel in San Jose, California, aired the names of the flight crew. But there was a problem: The names were actually an incredibly racist joke on the names Read more
Photos courtesy Petersen Automotive Museum. The Petersen Automotive Museum has loaded up on historic haulers for its latest exhibit, Pickups: The Art of Utility – a wide ranging collection of 19 trucks that includes a horseless carriage, early 4x4s, an Read more
Mercedes-Benz W196R 00006/54. Photos courtesy Bonhams. Until Friday, July 12, the most expensive car ever sold at auction was a 1957 Ferrari Testa Rossa Prototype, sold by Gooding & Company at its 2011 Monterey auction for $16.4 million (at the Read more
Photos courtesy Ford Media. When he rose to the Ford Motor Company’s pinnacle, Philip Caldwell did it under some of the most trying circumstances imaginable. He began to surmount that last rung in 1977, when chairman Henry Ford II broke Read more
Vic Edelbrock Sr. Photo courtesy NHRA. It was 1938 when Victor Edelbrock Sr. made his first performance intake manifold, the so-called slingshot, for the 1932 Ford roadster he was racing at Muroc Dry Lakes. It became a resounding success among Read more
“But I paid the seller for a 1962 Bel Air 409!” Photo by flickr user Son of Groucho. While the vast majority of used car sales are between legitimate sellers and buyers, car shoppers should never underestimate the lengths that Read more