Showing posts with label photos of cars. Show all posts
Showing posts with label photos of cars. Show all posts

Monday, April 16, 2007

007: Lotus Esprit - The Spy Who Loved Me


Lotus Esprit - The Spy Who Loved Me

After Goldfinger, James Bond took the DB5 for another quick spin in Thunderball. For the next few films, the 'Q' branch didn't have much to offer in the way of feature packed cars. A brief drive in an Aston Martin DBS during 'On Her Majesty's Secret Service' and a bit of 2 wheel driving in a Ford Mustang - then in 1977 things hotted up...

The Lotus Esprit was full of surprises..

Rear firing mud sprayers.
Full 'underwater' kit turning the car into a fully operative submarine.
Surface-to-air missiles used to end Naomi's helicopter ride.
Depth charges.
Underwater smoke screens
Torpedoes.

http://www.007.info/Cars.asp

technorati tags: 007, custom built car, custom car, pictures of cars, picture of car, photos of cars,
READ MORE - 007: Lotus Esprit - The Spy Who Loved Me

Monday, February 5, 2007

Time Traveler: My '40 Ford Fixation


Time Traveler: My '40 Ford Fixation: "I've wanted a 1940 Ford Deluxe business coupe for a long, long time.

Back in high school, I owned a '40 with a '53 Olds V8, but it never made it to the stage where it would run consistently. In those days, all my friends had '40 Ford coupes. Good-looking, lightweight and begging for more horsepower, '40 Ford coupes were the hot-rod du jour in the late '50s.

I've regretted selling it ever since.

Like the ethereal ice skater in the classic movie Carnal Knowledge, a '40 Ford coupe has twirled and pirouetted tantalizingly just out of reach in my mind ever since.

I sold my '34 Ford coupe last year ('Love means never having to say you're selling'), then I ramped up the hunt for that elusive '40."
READ MORE - Time Traveler: My '40 Ford Fixation

Monday, January 29, 2007

The Dodge Viper, Part 1

The Dodge Viper is the most powerful production car made by Dodge. Production of the two seat sports car, the Dodge Viper, began at New Mack Assembly in 1992 and moved to its current home at Conner Avenue Assembly in October 1995.

The Viper was conceived as a modern take on the classic American muscle car. While there are some who insist that the iconic AC Cobra was a source of inspiration, the final version of the Viper was far too large and heavy to seriously claim any direct lineage with the compact and lightweight vehicle. Most saw claims to kinship with the Cobra as a marketing exercise, although Carroll Shelby was involved in the initial design of the Viper.

The Viper was initially conceived in late 1987 at Chrysler's Advanced Design Studios. The following February, Chrysler president Bob Lutz suggested to Tom Gale at Chrysler Design that the company should consider producing a modern Cobra, and a clay model was presented to Lutz a few months later. The car appeared as a concept at the North American International Auto Show in 1989, and public reaction was so enthusiastic, that chief engineer Roy Sjeoberg was directed to develop it as a production car.

Sjoberg selected 85 engineers to be "Team Viper", with development beginning in March 1989. The team asked then-Chrysler subsidiary Lamborghini to cast some prototype aluminum blocks based on their V10 truck engine for sports car use in May. The production body was completed in the fall, with a chassis prototype running in December. Though a V8 was first used in the test mule, the V10 which the production car was meant to use was ready in February 1990.

Official approval from Chrysler chairman, Lee Iacocca, came in May 1990. One year later, Carroll Shelby piloted a preproduction car as the Indianapolis 500 pace car. In November 1991, the car was released to reviewers with first shipments beginning in January 1992.

The first prototype was tested in December 1989. It first debuted in 1991 with three pre-production models as the pace car for the Indianapolis 500 when Dodge was forced to substitute it in place of the Stealth, and went on sale in January 1992 as the soft roofed RT/10 Roadster.

The centerpiece of the car was its engine, with the car claimed as being built around it instead of the driver, boasting very few comforts, which did not even include door handles. Originally designed as a truck engine and based on the Chrysler LA engine, then a division of the Chrysler Corporation, revamped Dodge's cast-iron block V10 for the Viper by recasting the block and head in aluminum alloy, and giving the engine a significant power boost. Some within Lamborghini felt the pushrod two-valve design, while adequate for the truck application for which the engine was originally created, was unsuitable for a performance car and suggested a more comprehensive redesign which would have included four valves per cylinder. However, Chrysler was uncertain about the Viper's production costs and sales potential and so declined to provide the budget for the modification.

The engine produced 400 hp (298 kW) at 4600 rpm and 450 ft·lbf (610 N·m) of torque at 3600 rpm, and thanks to the long-gearing allowed by the torquey engine, provided surprising fuel economy at a claimed 21 mpg US (11.2 L/100 km) if driven sedately. The body was a tubular steel frame with resin transfer molding (RTM) fiberglass panels. Typical of American performance car design, it had a front-mounted engine driving the rear wheels; it was also heavy with a curb weight of 3,280 lb (1,488 kg) and lacked many modern driver aids such as traction control or anti-lock brakes. Car and Driver magazine referred to this generation as "the world's biggest Fat Boy Harley", and likened driving it to "playing ping pong with a Louisville Slugger baseball bat." Despite this, in straight line performance, it completed a quarter mile in 12.9 seconds and had a maximum speed of 164 mph (264 km/h).

Suspension on the first-gen Viper was equally frugal, with many front-end pieces coming directly from the Dakota pickup truck.

Performance:

0-60: 4.6 sec.

0-100: 9.2 sec.

quarter mile: 12.5 sec. @ 112 mph

top speed: 180+ (confirmed by Road and Track magazine / 1992)

700 ft slalom: over 65 mph

skidpad average g: .96

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dodge_Viper
READ MORE - The Dodge Viper, Part 1

Thursday, January 25, 2007

www.bumpstop.com

Check out Len's ongoing project and daily driver. It's a 1968 Suburban. Louvered hood and tailgate. 1939 Ford tail lights and wheels. Full air ride suspension with separate systems for front and rear. Chevy 350 4-bolt engine, Weiand manifold, Edelbrock Carb and Muncie 4-speed and much more! I can't complain, he's cruising in style.

Simon Quinten is coming to us from down under (Australia). His customized VW has a 1835cc motor with ported & polished heads counter weighted crankshaft, 40mm Weber and a 2.5 inch exhaust. Its been lowered with KYB gas strut inserts in the front and KYB gas shocks in the rear . It has Porsche 928s front bucket seats , opening rear windows Porsche headlights , 16in wheels , fiber glass guards , whale tail (off a 930 Porsche) , and custom stainless steel running boards. That's one cool Beetle.

Who said customs couldn't include a awesome rig? Check out John's 1999 Peterbilt 379 Model Tri axle Tractor. He wrote us a nice description and we'll let him tell the story.

Motor: Caterpillar 3406E, 550hp, Transmission is aa 18 Speed Eaton Fuller, the rears are Two speed Peterbilt rears 4:11 on the bottom for Pulling heavy loads and 3:73 on the top for Speed.

The Interior consists of all Peterbilt Chrome Gauges and tags, Rosewood & Billet steering wheel, Chrome upper door plate, Rosewood arm rests, Rosewood Emergency buttons including the dimmer lights and windshield wiper knobs...Chrome gear shift cover aftermarket peterbilt seats,carpeted floor, chrome cb cover and microphone, Rosewood speaker grill covers, Clarion Cd player, Clarion speakers, all the swithes on the dash are chrome sticks w red diamond jewels in the ends.

Exterior includes Full stainless steel fenders for 3 axle combo, 18 inch Texas Bumper with swinging License plate bracket Quilted Leather fender covers, 127 inch hood, 6 inch exhaust including the elbows, 12 inch slam visor, chrome windsheild surround 15 inch donaldson aircleaners, stainless steel light bar in the rear, stainless steel box covers, aluminum hydraulic box, and tool box (behind the cab) 5% limo tint all the way around...L.E.D Lights under the bumper, in the air cleaners front and back, in the side and back of the cab, and in the rear light bar... Polished fuel tanks, polished air tanks under the doors, polished grill, all aluminum polished alcoa wheels, stainless steel mudflap weights.... This truck has also won second and third place trophy's in West Virginia and Pennsylvania as a real working class truck........We really like it.

This is Eric's pimped out Blazer. He has a Fosgate RFX 8230 headunit in the front. In the back he has 36 Audiobahn A2800E amplifiers pushing 18, 12" Audiobahn Alum12s (dang, that's alot of woofers). For better performance he has an Audiobahn AEX30 30 band equalizer. Did I forget to mention 18, 1 farad Audiobahn ACAP1 capacitators to feed his amps? This system has peaked at 179.8 db's at the last competition he entered. I say a Boom-Chica-Boom!

See more Customs like this at :
http://www.bumpstop.com/custom.htm

READ MORE - www.bumpstop.com

Friday, January 19, 2007

Hot Rods, Part 4


Once customizing post-war cars caught on, some of the practices were extended to pre-war cars, which would have been called hot rods that kept their fenders but had more body work done on them. An alternate rule for disambiguation developed that hot rods had the engine behind the front suspension, while custom cars had the engine over the front suspension. The clearest example of this is that Fords prior to 1949 had Henry Ford's old transverse front suspension, while the 1949 model had a more modern suspension with the engine moved forward.

With the coming of the muscle car, and beyond that to the high-performance luxury car, customization declined. One place where it persisted was the US Southwest, where lowriders were built similar in concept to the earlier customs, but of post-1950s cars.

Recently, as the supply of usable antique steel bodies has given out, a new trend to fabricate new steel bodies, closely based on the styling of the pre-war cars. Bodies of this type can cost over $100,000 before the "running gear" is added. A consequence is that these new "scratch built" vehicles cannot be licensed for street use, as they do not meet the myriad of regulations that apply to new cars, and are not exempt as they were if rebuilt from original components fabricated before new regs came into effect.[citation needed]

Starting in the 1950's, it became a popular custom among custom car owners to display their vehicles at drive-in restaurants. Among the largest and longest lasting was Johnie's Broiler in Downey, California. The custom continues today, especially in Southern California.
READ MORE - Hot Rods, Part 4

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