1956 Jaguar XK140
Cruel Intentions (1999) · R · dir. Roger Kumble
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1990 Mazda Miata
Japanese Classic Car Show 2019
European zesty roadster
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Ross MacDonald - The Three Roads - Bantam - 1974
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Roadsters were neat. People used to just slap together cars from other cars and make new rocket-looking cars. This one is called Venus, and it has a sister car which also looks like a red, funky Batmobile.
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#Flashback 60 Years of Chevrolet Corvette
#C1 #C6 #Corvette #Roadsters #SoftTop #Convertibles #Corvettes #V8 #OG #CorvetteSuperCars #Worldwide
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Finding the Right Bike: A Quick Guide for Women - Avon Cycles
Ladies Cycling is the most thrilling and fun physical activity for all. Transcending age and gender, it offers uniquely incredible benefits serving various purposes
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1957 Jaguar XK140 M Roadster
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1932 Ford Model B 3 Window
All Classic Ford Show
This classic hot rod is the way to go
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3,400,000 Times That Tesla Had to Recall a Car Since 2018
Photo: Jonathan Weiss (Shutterstock)
In November of 2022, Tesla recalled some 40,000 vehicles because drivers were reporting the loss of power steering under certain conditions. Those conditions included driving in particularly rocky terrain or driving over potholes. Around the same time, the company also recalled another 30,000 cars due to improper airbag deployment issues.
#Times #Tesla…
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1965 Shelby Cobra 427 Roadster
The Shelby Roadster is arguably the most famous and relevant of all the automotive legends. In 1962, the Shelby Cobra (or AC Cobra, in the UK) wrote its storied beginnings as a collaboration between Ford and British automaker AC with the release of the first production Cobra known as the CSX2001 / Mark I.
In the early 1960s, Ford endeavored to build a car that would oust the Chevrolet Corvette as the USA’s most significant sports car. The American automaker was well prepared to take on their local rival and had already produced the engine they would take to the fight – a new, lightweight, thin-wall cast small-block 3.6L V8. However, they still needed a chassis to go along with the powerplant.
Here enters the charismatic Carroll Shelby – financially backed by Ford for this venture – who recognized the racing success of the AC Ace in the late 1950s and would end up brokering an agreement with the Britons who would manufacture a chassis based on the Ace, which Ford would then use its fledgling V8 engine to breathe life into.
Although the Ace was an aging design near the end of its life cycle, its lightweight structure would become the ideal complement in creating one of the greatest American sports cars ever made over the next few years. Thus, the Shelby Cobra was born; and the rest, as they say, is history
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