When you click on links to various merchants on this site and make a purchase, this can result in this site earning a commission. Affiliate programs and affiliations include, but are not limited to, the eBay Partner Network.
Last batch. The first pic is from a Toyota dealer showing kids how to remove/replace the tire. And teaching them the components underneath. And I couldn't resist the cop car picture. Once they opened the door about 10 kids all 8 and under ran to it and jumped in.
Wouldn't it be sick to have so much money you can have your own F1 car and just take drives on race tracks almost whenever you wanted? Obviously this one goes to a home museum or garage display, but just think, Every other week jetting around the world to do this?
Wouldn't it be sick to have so much money you can have your own F1 car and just take drives on race tracks almost whenever you wanted? Obviously this one goes to a home museum or garage display, but just think, Every other week jetting around the world to do this?
Word. No fking doubt I would do it if I had the chance.
I have shared it before but I am SURE you won't mind seeing it again. This is a clip I took at Road America somewhere around 2003, when someone who had purchased Jean Alesi's 1993 Ferrari F1 brought it to the track, it was just like a test, tuning and touring day. He also had a blue and yellow Bennetton F1 car there.
"Sounds like a deal to me"
- Most dumbass Americans
yeah, but I’m super smart, I refinanced my 50 year 37% loan fixed for a 60 year 25% flexible rate loan! Gotta be smart and jump on opportunities when they present themselves!
That's a whole new level of crazy.
And I thought a guy driving the last US-spec Gullwing, in the rain, was nuts. And that was only about $2M at the time.
That's a whole new level of crazy.
And I thought a guy driving the last US-spec Gullwing, in the rain, was nuts. And that was only about $2M at the time.
Anyone who has ever restored an old car knows that many of their problems would be solved by starting with a fresh chassis rather than dealing with the rust, road grime, and gunk that has built up over the decades. We all wish we could start over with a clean slate, right? Building from a body-in-white would be significantly easier than starting with a beat up donor chassis, so when a Chinese concern announced it would be selling complete fresh reproduction chassis of Toyota's iconic AE86 Corolla, we were naturally quite excited.
In order to find out if these Alibaba chassis were any good, the boys at BigTime bought one, as well as a thrashed AE86 donor chassis. Their idea was to attempt to fit all of the parts from a ragged example into the new chassis to see how good, or indeed bad, it might be. It definitely didn't go as smoothly as they had hoped it would, with some stuff not looking very good at the outset.
In the build process the BigTime crew definitely found a few things that would give a Toyota engineer some pause; bad welds, a few shortcuts, mismatched holes, poor fitment, missing hardware, and mis-drilled components. Like Mike said, this was the first chassis, so maybe subsequent examples will be better than this, but do you really want to spend ten grand plus import duties to find out?
Despite the chassis not being quite square and some of the hardware holes being in entirely the wrong place, the car did ultimately come together with some finagling. Quite a few rivnuts were added, a few holes were enlarged or moved, and the dash bar is under some pretty serious tension, but within the course of this episode the BigTime guys got the car moving under its own power, and even ripping a quick J-turn for the hell of it.
Now that they have a complete and running AE86 chassis, built from the ground up within just a couple long days of work, what on earth can they do with it? This kind of Chinese chassis, as you can imagine, don't come with a VIN tag, and certainly can't be made road legal or registerable without committing some light fraud. If you want a track-only AE86 or a fresh drift car, however, maybe this is the move. Obviously if you're going to end up stitch-welding the panels and building a roll cage anyway, it doesn't really matter if the folks in China did a bang up job of metal glue.
We'll have to wait and see how this project progresses for them in future episodes, and how they end up taking advantage of a clean and rust-free shell. It still needs quite a lot of things added to make it a fully functioning car, like an interior and window glass. That said, it's a very neat project, and I look forward to seeing it complete. It's already quite rowdy, and knowing these fellas, they're going to make it rowdier.
With a hot rotary engine going into the donor car, maybe something like a 3S-GTE engine would be more fitting for this thing. I'd like to see one car as a drifter and one as a grip-focused track car. Whatever they do, it won't be boring.
Yeah, but at $10k, and needing a donor to fill it. You have to be a pretty diehard AE86 fan to go through with it.
From the Big Time video, the one they got was supposedly the first chassis, and subsequent ones were 'better' but by the end of the video, they had a running and driving car.
Also thieves.
Our receptionist had her catalytic converter cut out of her Tacoma yesterday.
Middle of the day, but on the side of our building, cameras got the car, but the plate wasn't readable.
Also thieves.
Our receptionist had her catalytic converter cut out of her Tacoma yesterday.
Middle of the day, but on the side of our building, cameras got the car, but the plate wasn't readable.
That sucks. Any chance cops could get a plate read from other nearby cameras seeing you have the make and model of the car? Perhaps not worth the effort??
It's happened before. A mgr here got both stolen off his Tundra. We got the vehicle description and a better look at the people. They hit another office & they got the plate number.
Not sure it helps the person damaged by it, but at least they got caught.
I've got a solid ID on the car, but nothing on the driver or plate.
Large office complex near IAH, not the best of neighborhoods, but we haven't had any issues in a few years.